Romney Defends ‘Managed Bankruptcy’ for Auto Firms in Op-Ed - East Idaho News
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Romney Defends ‘Managed Bankruptcy’ for Auto Firms in Op-Ed

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Getty 090611 MittRomney?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1329235920290Ethan Miller/Getty Images(PHOENIX) — Mitt Romney renewed his criticism of President Obama’s auto bailout in an op-ed Tuesday, defending his often-criticized stance that “managed bankruptcy” would have been a better way to rescue the failing corporations.

Penning the op-ed in the Detroit News, Romney accuses Obama of engaging in “crony capitalism” as he “rewarded union bosses” when he orchestrated an $85 billion bailout for the auto industry in 2009.

“A labor union that had contributed millions to Democrats and his election campaign was granted an ownership share of Chrysler and a major stake in GM, two flagships of the industry,” Romney writes.  “The U.S. Department of Treasury – American taxpayers – was asked to become a majority stockholder of GM.  And a politically connected and ethically challenged Obama-campaign contributor, the financier Steven Rattner, was asked to preside over all this as auto czar.

“This was crony capitalism on a grand scale,” Romney writes.  “The president tells us that without his intervention things in Detroit would be worse.  I believe that without his intervention things there would be better.”

Romney goes on to suggest that the administration should “act now to divest itself of its ownership position in GM.”

“The shares need to be sold in a responsible fashion and the proceeds turned over to the nation’s taxpayers,” he says.

Having long argued that letting the auto companies go through a “managed bankruptcy” would have resulted in a faster turnaround, Romney used Tuesday’s op-ed to defend his position, which was first explained in a 2008 New York Times op-ed titled “Let Detroit Go Bankrupt.”

“Managed bankruptcy may sound like a death knell,” he writes Tuesday.  “But in fact, it is a way for a troubled company to restructure itself rapidly, entering and leaving the courtroom sometimes in weeks or months instead of years, and then returning to profitable operation.”

“In the case of Chrysler and GM, that was precisely what the companies needed. Both were saddled with an accumulation of labor, pension, and real estate costs that made them unsustainable,” Romney writes.

Tuesday’s op-ed comes two weeks before the Michigan primary, a contest that some see as a must-win for the former Massachusetts governor. 

Born in Detroit and raised in the suburb of Bloomfield Hills by father Gov. George Romney, Romney mentions his Michigan roots throughout the piece, dubbing himself a “son of Detroit.”

“The dream of the Motor City is and always has been one of ideas, innovation, enterprise, and opportunity,” Romney writes.  “And with a Detroiter in the White House, that dream can be realized once again.”

Romney is scheduled to campaign in Michigan Wednesday and Thursday and will give a speech at Ford Field next week.  His wife, Ann Romney, will also campaign in Michigan on her own in the weeks leading up to the Feb. 28 primary.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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