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Toyoda, who speaks halting English, planned to appear with a translator by his side, as well as Yoshimi Inaba, president and CEO of Toyota Motor North America Inc., who is fluent in English. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and David Strickland, the new head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, also were expected to testify. Also scheduled to appear was the mother of an off-duty California highway patrolmen killed with three family members in a runaway Lexus on a San Diego highway in August. LaHood defended NHTSA in his prepared testimony, saying it has acted aggressively to force Toyota to address safety problems. He told lawmakers Tuesday that the agency is looking closely at whether electronics are to blame. "We will get in the weeds on this," he testified. Lawmakers indicated they will continue to push Toyoda for answers on whether his company's top-selling cars and trucks are safe to drive. The Transportation Department's vehicle safety division also faces continued questions over whether it took the problem seriously enough and paid attention to warnings signs with Toyotas long before the recalls. Toyoda's three-page statement departs somewhat from his native formality. In it, Toyoda emphasizes that he personally test-drives Toyotas. And he makes a personal appeal for credibility. "My name is on every car," he says.
[Associated
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