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NYCshopper
03-25-2007, 07:33 PM
Toyota not among carmakers invited to White House

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070325/pl_nm/toyota_bush_dc

http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/nm/20070325/2007_03_25t121429_450x309_us_toyota_bush.jpg


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp. is creating U.S. jobs, making friends in Washington and leading in fuel-saving technology, yet will not be at the table when President George W. Bush meets major automakers to talk energy policy on Monday.

Chief executives of General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group will roll into the White House to discuss Bush's proposal to cut fuel consumption by 20 percent over 10 years by encouraging gasoline alternatives and imposing tougher mileage standards.

The meeting is central to Bush's push to generate support for his energy proposals, which for autos have received a mixed reception from the industry and congressional lawmakers.

The discussions will build on talks that Alan Mulally of Ford, Rick Wagoner of GM and Tom LaSorda of Chrysler had with Bush four months ago on similar energy issues as well as concerns about Asian currencies and trade.

All three companies are closing plants, cutting jobs and looking for tax breaks and other government help on energy initiatives to revive their prospects.

Bush irritated automakers and their political allies last year when he said they should build more relevant products. He has been reaching out to them this year.

Japan's Toyota, meanwhile, eclipsed Chrysler in U.S. sales last year and is tailgating Ford now. Analysts expect Toyota to dethrone GM as global sales leader this year.

A sign of growing political respect for Toyota's approach on energy came on March 14 when Jim Press, the company's North American chief executive, testified with Mulally, Wagoner and LaSorda at a House of Representatives Energy and Commerce hearing on some of the topics to be discussed Monday.

SLOWLY BUILDING SUPPORT

Press was invited by Rep. John Dingell (news, bio, voting record), a Michigan Democrat who is a staunch "Big Three" ally and the committee's chairman. Dingell noted Toyota's significance and said energy and climate change should be policy-driven, not political.

Toyota says it is mindful of Detroit's problems and its political and economic significance, especially in the Midwest. Toyota treads carefully in Washington, where it has slowly built support.

"I think we understand the politics of it and understand they have particular issues that have to be addressed," Toyota spokeswoman Martha Voss said of GM, Ford and Chrysler.

With gas prices climbing, an increasing number of consumers have turned away from Detroit's sport utility vehicles and pickups to more fuel-stingy options offered by Toyota and other foreign manufacturers.

Toyota is the world leader in hybrid technology and is researching batteries for electric cars, testing hydrogen fuel cells and working on clean diesel, ethanol and ethanol/gas blends. Those are among key elements of Bush's plan.

The White House said it displayed a modified Prius, Toyota's popular hybrid, at a electric car event this month. But no Toyota officials were present.

Some political and industry experts say Toyota still does not measure up politically on enough counts.

Alan Tonelson, a research fellow at the U.S. Business and Industry Council in Washington, said Toyota should be able to discuss energy issues with the others.

But as for trade policy and other business topics, he said there are "very valid reasons" to exclude foreign manufacturers.

"The best research I have seen is that they don't add as much value to the American economy as the 'Big Three' automakers," Tonelson said.

Peter Morici, an economist and University of Maryland business professor, noted that Toyota builds a percentage of cars domestically but is mostly perceived as a "foreign investor" whose profits flow mainly back to Japan.

Nevertheless, Morici said Toyota probably should be with the others on Monday on public policy grounds, including its potential contribution to a discussion on energy.

"Toyota is gradually going to become the Number Two automaker in the United States. We should be cultivating them," Morici said.

ram95
03-26-2007, 04:04 AM
its ok toyota is so great that it doeant need its booty kissed by the white house. GM and Ford are having troubles and that is why the got invited. they need to find some way to save themselves and having the government help with the fule regulations might be the only way

Mike Wevrick
03-26-2007, 12:15 PM
"Bush irritated automakers and their political allies last year when he said they should build more relevant products."

boo-hoo Bush is right; build vehicles people actually want and you won't have so many problems.

Siper2
03-26-2007, 01:04 PM
I'm sure Toyota has skeletons in its closet, but it consistently manages to produce better, cleaner, more efficient products. The US does nothing of the kind.

In my opinion, they deserve the #1 manufacturer spot. So long as GM and Ford keep underperforming, where they have no Earthly right to do so, they dig their own graves.

Toyota already did surpass Ford as #2, but yeah I wouldn't be surprised if they eclipsed GM as #1 within a year or two.

=S2=

sential
03-26-2007, 03:13 PM
the only automakers invited were american ones... If you're going to mention Toyota not getting invited, you might as well mention, honda and nissan too, as they do lots of business in america and provide many jobs for us too...

brianbot5000
03-26-2007, 03:24 PM
Sounds like a meeting of the losers.

tom@kartboy
03-26-2007, 03:41 PM
Sounds like a meeting of the losers.

HAHA
and their king is speaking. :lol:

sential
03-26-2007, 10:58 PM
HAHA
and their king is speaking. :lol:

bwahhahaha! good one

mountjonas
03-27-2007, 01:06 AM
HAHA
and their king is speaking. :lol:

yet another reason why i will be supporting kartboy when it's time for some goodies for my car.

bgd73
03-27-2007, 06:35 PM
HAHA
and their king is speaking. :lol:

No doubt about it!

the real pressure is on.. what do childish designers do but panic and make something else we don't want in thier world of make believe.Can an adult male team takeover, perhaps pursue a democratic means to go about it? staying scared of giants with pea-sized brains is getting old...