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Both companies have shown signs of a comeback. GM has posted two straight profitable quarters and is expected to conduct an initial public offering later this year that would help the U.S. reduce its 61 percent stake in the company. Chrysler, placed under control of Italian automaker Fiat, has narrowed its losses and is considering a public stock offering sometime in 2011. Obama and White House officials have made similar claims about the auto bailout before. In a July 30 visit to a GM plant, Obama described three options to address the near GM and Chrysler collapse. "Option number one was to keep on doing what the previous administration had been doing, which is basically give about a billion dollars a month to the auto industry, but not really ask for any kind of change that would get it on the right track," Obama said. White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel said in a June interview with ABC News' "This Week" that "in the case of General Motors, the prior administration wrote a check without asking any conditions of change." Austan Goolsbee, the new chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said in a Fox News Sunday interview in June that the White House was confronted with the distressed automakers "because somebody else kicked the can down the road." In his new book, "Overhaul," Steven Rattner, who led Obama's auto task force, credits the Bush team for giving the incoming auto task force "a little breathing room" to restructure the companies and for providing a framework of "expected sacrifices that paved the way for our demands for give-ups from the stakeholders."
[Associated
Press;
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