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Robert Nardelli, chief executive of Chrysler, is in on the salary cut, too. He was late to the hybrid caravan to Washington but he’s now along for the ride. Chrysler, however, has not specified the model he’ll take. The automaker’s only hybrids, the Dodge Durango Hybrid and Chrysler Aspen Hybrid, are a pair of hemi-engine V8 hybrids that don’t quite manage an average of 20 mpg. These monster hybrids were put into production this fall, but will go out of production this month when Chrysler shutters its Newark, Del., assembly plant. That’s right: Nardelli’s only hybrid choices from the company garage are canceled hybrids—arriving in showrooms for the first time only weeks before they die for good.
Courtesy of Chrysler LLC
Chrysler is holding on by a thread and seeks a $7 billion bridge loan by December 31 to stabilize the company until it can be merged with another automaker. The company is also promising hybrids and electric cars in the coming years. But the fact that Nardelli will be driving to Congress in Chrysler’s only hybrid, a canceled model, speaks volumes about the company’s ability to make good on federal funds.
America is a car culture. Like it or not, what we drive says a lot about who we are. For the CEOs of the Big Three and the lawmakers deciding their fate, that’s never been truer.
RELATED: Michael Moore: Let's Buy the Big Three
Bradley Berman is the editor of HybridCars.com and writes about hybrids for BusinessWeek, The New York Times, and other publications.









I like another author's suggestion: All big three should drive Toyota Prius to DC, and say, "This is what we are GOING to build", if need be, under license. Another good idea: allow high mpg cars from Europe free-entry into the US, exempt from US standards (but meeting EU standards) to give immediate impetus for change. Oh, and one more suggestion: GM should shut down construction of the car plant it is building in Russia, and use the money to build a new, HYBRID plant HERE!!!
The Prius is a pile of Hype. The Ford Escape was there a long time before the Prius but American consumers are not buying it! Why? Snobbery? More money than they know what to do with?
Ford is building Mega MPG cars in Europe, I drove a Ford Fiesta Diesel there that did $62 miles to the gallon. Why won't the US government let Ford build these diesel cars in the US.
BTW almost all car manufacturers in Europe build great diesel cars with great MPG stats including the Big Three! Does the American consumer not like diesel? Why? snobbery? More money than they know what to do with?
I agree Ford is the company and has the chief executive with the most credibility. My bet is on Ford to survive!
Fords F150 60 MPG Hydraulic Hybrid is coming!
Buy American, you snobs, especially now that you do not have more money than you know what to do with! and the auto crisis will evaporate!
I've yet to see anyone point up the ludicrous example of DRIVING from Detroit to Washington. About 9 hours without any rest stops or meals.
ARE THEY KIDDING???
They skip the company jet but then decide to go on a ROAD TRIP?
Something is very wrong.
How about taking a plane and then renting a car like the rest of the business world does.
Prius or not, the hybrids these companies are building show a good list.
As a sidenote, IIRC the Obamas own an Escape Hybrid.
While I agree that Ford is by far the best of the Big 3 as far as being able to genuinely put its tail between its legs, admit it was wrong before, and put its best foot forward in front of Congress, there's a big thing that the author is missing: we can't all drive hybrids.
If Mulally really wanted to impress the Congress, he would have driven the Euro-Spec Ford Mondeo (likely coming to the US soon as the Taurus), a car that gets better mileage than the Chevy Hybrid... without electric motors.
While I like hybrids, what America genuinely needs is to work on making simple cars fuel efficient, not ones that require multiple motors, complicated transmissions, and bloated expectations about getting 90 MPG. Ford, which is emphasizing bringing over its wildly popular Euro Ford models, all of which get excellent MPG and don't cost too much, is by far the company with the greatest ideas.
So why is GM trying to pawn off Saturn? The Saturn Aura (itself a German Opel) was the Car of the Year in Detroit. If Saturn is the greatest company in the GM Marque to bring over fuel efficient, European cars (that are rated really, really well), why sell it? Especially in order to keep GMC, which simply rebadges Chevys?
Chrysler is dead. They just can't make good cars anymore. I maintain that the Caravan was one of the greatest cars of all time, but Chrysler is about to turn into AMC: dead, forgotten, and missed by only about six people.
Has anyone heard of a carpool?
They could have all conspired on the drive here to get their plans and stories straight...
With all due respect, the fact that you think that driving an SUV is progress for American car company executives is just as big a problem as the fact that they're driving them. They are all late to arrive at the 21st century. These CEO's only cared about the next quarter's profits, so there was/is no long-term strategic thinking available to them. However, large sums of shareholders' cash is always available to them, whether they perform well as executives or not.
Wake me up when our Congressional leaders offer to take a major pay cut and refuse luxury private travel. Oh, and what type of symbolic pay cuts are required from banking executives?
Sorry but I want these jokers to be treated equally... Or allowed to succeed on the virtue of their own accomplishment - just like the rest of us.
Nardelli? He should have just hitchhiked...
OK, I heard a similar theory with bad math a while back, but doing the numbers correctly... If you took our 305 million or so US Citizens and split the 700 billions bailout among them, that work out to around $2300 for every man, woman and child in the USA. Wouldn't that stimulate our economy? Get people buying cars? Keep them from losing their houses and defaulting on mortgages? Better to bail out the weak minded who were susceptible to the sub-prime crack dealers, than the sub-prime crack dealers and auto execs who should know better and are rich beyond most people's wildest dreams...
How is anyone impressed by this gesture? Who cares what they drive, or that they're selling some jets!? These people ran their companies into a massive hole long before the current problems (see GM's debt to suppliers). These tokens are worthless.
Thank you for finally recognizing that the Big Three are not all the same! I grew up in Detroit, and trust me, there has always been a difference between GM and Ford. Ford has a great opportunity to come out of all this a better company - since they were already on the right track before the economic collapse.
The Chevy Malibu Hybrid costs 3,000 less than the Ford Escape. It also has better performance, higher quality, and gets better HWY MPG (34) than that Escape. You should do a little research before calling it a half-hearted attempt. They chose a more cost effective drive train in order to actually be able to sell the vehicle at a competitive price. A hybrid means nothing if it doesn't save the consumer money (unless the person thinks they are saving the environment by hauling 200 lbs of toxic battery waste everywhere they go). I'm not sure that a 30,000 dollar Ford Escape saves you anything.
Hey vankuyk, have you ever owned new american built and new Japanese built? If you had you wouldn't be calling the people who buy Japanese snobs. I tried 5 times to buy "American" built cars(new). Every time, within weeks or even days on 2 models, they're in the shop. I've purchased 4 Japanese built vehicles and had 1 repair for $350 in a total of 340,000 miles. You just do the maintenance and drive them for 250,000 or more miles. If you buy American you have to buy 2 vehicles each time. One to drive while the other one is in the shop! So I guess by your calculations that makes me a snob. It is common knowledge that the people that work in the Japanese factories (whether it's in America or Japan) take more pride in their product than do workers in American factories. And their total hourly compensation is $43 per hour. The UAW workers is $73 per hour.
) take more pride in their product
Consumers have been left with the sour taste of poor quality vehicles for decades. It is build quality, reliability, consistency, etc., not gluttony, that leads us to buy Japanese cars.
vankuyk: The first generation Prius was built in 1997 and released in the US in 2000. The Ford Escape Hybrid was released in 2004.
While talking to my conservative brother-in-law in California this afternoon, I suggested these guys should have flown coach.
He suggested they should have walked.
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
Mr. Berman: I have 2 better symbolic gestures:
1) The Big Three executives should carpool in the Escape hybrid to shoe that they are willing to cooperate to save the industry.
2) The Big Three executives should fly coach to DC like every other exec usually has to do these days and rent a hybrid on arrival just like other cost saving execs would have to do.
If the US wants to solve this supposed crisis for the Big Three, we should adopt the EU standards for fuel efficiency and safety so that the mega MPG cars from Europe and Asia that they produce can compete in the market here. Allow Citroen, Fiat, and the rest access to the US market as well to keep the heat on the Big Three to innovate on higher MPG gas, diesel, fuel cell, and natural gas cars. Mandate that the Big Three adopt just in time manufacturing and lean production workflows that have allowed Toyota to eat their lunch for several years. Simple solution are available for the right price and the stomach for evolution.
Rick Wagoner picked the perfect car to drive to Washington--the Mailbu, a hokum hybrid that nobody is buying because it gets just 2 miles per gallon more than its conventionally-powered siblings.
When Honda's hybrid Civic can deliver 13 MPG more than a standard Civic--a 40-plus percent improvement--the best GM has to offer is a paltry 10 percent gain.
Sorry, Rick, but 10 percent doesn't cut it.
I love driving my 2009 Ford Escape Hybrid Limited with Virginia Clean Special Fuel license plates in the HOV lanes, especially when tailgating behind a Prius. You don't have to drive an ugly foreign car to drive "green".
Thank you.
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