RAW STORY
DETROIT, Michigan — Chrysler’s chief on Tuesday joined a chorus of
critics slamming Mitt Romney for an ad that implies Jeep is shipping
American jobs to China as a result of President Barack Obama’s policies.
The ad is airing in the critical battleground of Ohio, where one in
eight jobs depends on the auto industry and Chrysler is building Jeeps
at a plant in Toledo.
It was produced after the Republican White House hopeful was roundly
criticized for telling supporters in Ohio last week that Jeep was going
to move “all” production to China.
Chrysler called the rumor “a leap that would be difficult even for professional circus acrobats.”
Obama won a lot of support among Ohio’s blue collar workers by
pushing through an $84 billion bailout of the US auto industry despite
objections from Republicans — including Romney, who has taken heat for
declaring “let Detroit go bankrupt” in the midst of the crisis.
With just a week to go before the November 6 election, Obama is
currently up by 2.1 points in a Real Clear Politics average of recent
Ohio polls.
Romney’s ad shows cars being crushed as a narrator declares that
“Obama took GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy and sold Chrysler to
Italians who are going to build Jeeps in China,” while insisting Romney
will “do more” for the auto industry.
Chrysler chief executive officer Sergio Marchionne insisted that
plans to build Jeeps in China are a sign of the company’s strength and
that local production is the only way to expand in the world’s largest
automotive market.
He also noted that Chrysler has tripled Jeep production in the United
States and added more than 11,200 jobs since it came under Fiat’s
stewardship in 2009. “Jeep assembly lines will remain in operation in
the United States and will constitute the backbone of the brand,”
Marchionne said in a letter to employees.
“It is inaccurate to suggest anything different.”
The Obama campaign fought back Monday with an ad of its own calling
Romney “wrong then… dishonest now,” interspersed with a clip of Romney
saying “let Detroit go bankrupt.”
Romney has called his rival’s use of the quote misleading, insisting
that that he was simply saying the private sector should take the lead
and that Obama ultimately did as he suggested by restructuring General
Motors and Chrysler under bankruptcy protection.
Critics and experts have noted that credit markets were essentially
frozen due to the financial crisis and that GM, Chrysler and their
suppliers would have simply collapsed without government help at a cost
of about a million jobs.
Both companies have posted huge profits, expanded production, added
jobs and repaid most of their loans since emerging from the
government-backed bankruptcy.
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