More cash for GM clunker?


By Dan Becker and James Gerstenzang

McClatchy-Tribune

WASHINGTON — Here is a test for the new Republican majority headed for the House of Representatives under the banner of cutting the budget deficit, ending federal bailouts and showing fairness to taxpayers.

The American people have saved General Motors with more than $50 billion in bailouts and subsidies. GM says we will get it all back. But hidden in statements accompanying its stock offering, the automaker discloses that it won’t relinquish another subsidy — up to $45 billion in tax breaks that, without an IRS exemption, would have been wiped away when the company went bankrupt.

This GM loophole presents the Republicans with an early opportunity to live up to the campaign commitments that powered their election victory:

By closing it, they can slash $45 billion from the deficit, slam the door on the next phase of GM’s bailout, and raise their banner of fairness for the American taxpayer. Or they can allow this GM tax dodge to proceed.

Before the automaker went under, it accrued billions of dollars in losses. Under the loophole, the company is able to use those losses to shield up to $45 billion in tax liability over the next 20 years.

HONEY OF A DEAL FOR GM

GM’s lobbyists certainly earned their pay. Even after the bankruptcy is just a bad memory, like the Cheshire cat’s grin the tax loophole will survive.

As a result, American taxpayers have not only shelled out more than $50 billion to bail out the company, we will have to come up with the extra cash to make up for the billions that the car company won’t have to pay in taxes.

Ironically, the loophole comes to light as GM, which just reported its largest quarterly profit in 11 years (Nov. 10) is trying to weaken the next round of clean-car standards that the Environmental Protection Administration and the Department of Transportation are preparing.

For GM, the tax dodge is a honey of a deal.

For the new House majority, it is a test: Do they prefer their principles — or more cash for a clunker?

Dan Becker directs the Safe Climate Campaign, an environmental organization that advocates strong measures to fight global warming. James Gerstenzang is the campaign’s editorial director. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.