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Obama has urged the Bush administration to do more to help the industry and aides said he raised the issue with President Bush on Monday in an Oval Office meeting. Officials familiar with the conversation said the president replied he was open to the idea. Congress approved legislation in late September to provide $25 billion in loans to domestic automakers and suppliers to upgrade factories to build more fuel-efficient vehicles. But the funding has stalled and supporters of the industry say it will not be sufficient to help the companies with their immediate financial problems. Executives with GM, Ford and Chrysler LLC and the president of the United Auto Workers union pressed Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., to provide an immediate $25 billion loan to keep the companies operating and a separate $25 billion to help cover future health care obligations for retirees and their dependents. Pelosi's statement did not specify the size of the aid package. She has tasked Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, to draft legislation, and a companion effort is under way in the Senate. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said lawmakers from his state are crafting legislation that would allow the auto industry to receive $25 billion in loans under the $700 billion bailout program. Levin said Reid told him that a rescue plan to automakers could be a separate bill or could be included in legislation to extend unemployment benefits to workers. Pelosi's announcement raises the possibility that the post-election session could cover more areas. The Bush administration has said the enactment of a free trade agreement with Colombia is its top priority in Congress. Many Democrats oppose the proposed agreement as written. But it's unclear if a compromise could be reached that would lead to financial help to the auto industry and a trade agreement clearing Congress.
[Associated
Press;
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