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Chrysler said it was also disappointed and would "continue to pursue a workable solution to help ensure the future viability of the company." The companies efforts for funding failed after a marathon set of negotiations at the Capitol among labor, the auto industry and lawmakers who bargained into the night to salvage the auto bailout at a time of soaring job losses and widespread economic turmoil. The group came close to agreement, but it stalled over the UAW's refusal to agree to wage cuts before their current contract expires in 2011. Republicans, in turn, balked at giving the automakers federal aid. The UAW did not immediately react to the failure of the Senate proposal. Aid to the automakers gained urgency last week when the government reported the economy had lost more than a half-million jobs in November, the most in any month for more than 30 years. The stunning disintegration of the auto bailout proposal was eerily reminiscent of the defeat of the $700 billion Wall Street bailout in the House, which sent the Dow tumbling and lawmakers back to the drawing board to draft a new agreement to rescue financial institutions and halt a broader economic meltdown. That measure ultimately passed and was signed by Bush. It wasn't immediately clear, however, how the auto aid measure might be resurrected in a bailout-fatigued, postelection Congress, with Bush's influence at a low ebb. Earlier in the week, the House approved a bill that would have created a Bush-appointed overseer to dole out the money. At the same time, carmakers would be compelled to return the aid if the "car czar" decided the carmakers hadn't done enough to restructure by spring. Some Senate Democrats joined Republicans in turning against the House-passed bill, despite increasingly urgent expressions of support from the White House and Obama for quick action to spare the economy the added pain of a potential automaker collapse.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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