Bailout backers seek GOP votes
Automobile rescue plan takes turns in Senate ahead of a pivotal vote next week
By The Associated Press
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Published: November 15, 2008
WASHINGTON — Struggling to keep alive a government bailout of the troubled auto industry, key supporters offered concessions Friday — including reducing its $25 billion size. The White House came out firmly against a Democratic plan to carve it out of a $700 billion rescue package for financial companies.

Unsold 2008 Fusions sedans sit at a Ford dealership in the southeast Denver suburb of Centennial, Colo., Nov. 2. AP PHOTO
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The measure gained important ground among Republicans on
Capitol Hill, where at least a dozen to 15
GOP votes in the Senate will be needed to prevent opponents from blocking it in the Senate. The focal vote on that could occur as early as next Wednesday.
Sen. Kit Bond of
Missouri became the second Republican to publicly voice support for the idea, joining
Sen. George Voinovich of
Ohio. Both states have major auto plants. Several other GOP senators signaled they might accept a rescue for
Detroit’s Big Three if it contained strict conditions for the beleaguered companies, including management and salary changes, concessions from their powerful unions, and a commitment to making more fuel-efficient vehicles.
Alan Reuther, the
United Auto Workers union’s legislative director, said one option under consideration was a smaller, more targeted amount of funding "that would get the companies through to March.” He said the union was "open to discussing various options like that. There’s a need for immediate action.”
Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said negotiations were taking place on how much to trim the package.
Showdown ahead
General Motors Corp.,
Ford Motor Co., and
Chrysler LLC have been clamoring for aid as their industry is battered by the economic meltdown, which has choked off sales and frozen credit. GM has said it might not survive through year’s end without a government lifeline.
The White House’s rejection of using any of the $700 billion designated for the financial meltdown sets up what could be the last showdown between
President George W. Bush and the Democratic Congress. "Democrats are choosing a path that would only lead to partisan gridlock,” White House
press secretary Dana Perino told
The Associated Press.
Perino said the administration would rather Congress speed the release of a separate $25 billion loan package for the carmakers.
Defying Bush, Reid, D-Nev., said he would hold a vote next week on the measure, attaching the auto help to a $6 billion bill to extend jobless aid to unemployed workers whose benefits are expiring.
Behind the scenes, proponents scrounged for more support among Republicans from states with heavy concentrations of auto manufacturers and suppliers, and worked to allay concerns among lawmakers in both parties about supporting yet another bailout so soon after the unpopular financial industry rescue.
A handful of other GOP senators have said they are open to the measure.
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