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						Chided by Trump, Ford 
						scraps Mexico factory, adds Michigan jobs 
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		 [January 04, 2017] 
		By Bernie Woodall and David Shepardson 
 FLAT 
		ROCK, Mich./WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co <F.N> on Tuesday 
		scrapped a planned Mexican car factory and added 700 jobs in Michigan 
		following criticism by Donald Trump, as the U.S. president-elect turned 
		his attention toward rival General Motors Co <GM.N> with the threat of a 
		"big border tax" over compact cars made in Mexico.
 
 Ford CEO Mark Fields called the move "a vote of confidence" in Trump, 
		but primarily a response to a decline in North American demand for small 
		cars like those that would have been made at the Mexican plant. He said 
		Ford would have made the same decision even if Trump had not been 
		elected.
 
 Ford will cancel plans unveiled in April to spend $1.6 billion to build 
		the new plant in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, a project Trump urged the 
		automaker to abandon and called an "absolute disgrace" during the 
		election campaign.
 
 The No. 2 U.S. automaker also said it would invest $700 million to 
		expand the Flat Rock, Michigan factory and would make new electric, 
		hybrid and autonomous vehicles there.
 
 Trump's efforts to browbeat the U.S. car industry show he may go further 
		than other modern presidents to try to influence corporate decisions, 
		especially those related to trade and investment.
 
		
		 
		In a Twitter post hours before Ford's announcement, Trump wrote, 
		"General Motors is sending Mexican made model of Chevy Cruze to U.S. car 
		dealers-tax free across border. Make in U.S.A. or pay big border tax!" 
		GM, the largest U.S. automaker, said making some of the Cruze cars in 
		the plant in Coahuila, Mexico was part of its strategy to serve global 
		customers, not sell those vehicles in the United States.
 Trump's GM tweet was his latest broadside aimed at an American company 
		over jobs, imports and costs even before he takes office on Jan. 20.
 
 Mexico's government said it regrets Ford's decision and has ensured that 
		the company will reimburse San Luis Potosi state for any costs 
		associated with the investment.
 
 "Obviously, this isn't a good decision for us," said Mexico's economy 
		minister, Ildefonso Guajardo.
 
 Ford said it still will shift production from Michigan of its Focus 
		compact car to an existing plant in Hermosillo, Mexico. Fields said he 
		expects Michigan to give incentives for Ford's investment in Flat Rock.
 
 Ford spokeswoman Jennifer Flake said the automaker will save $500 
		million by not opening the new plant in the near term, but will have 
		some undisclosed costs to retool the other Mexican plant to build the 
		Focus.
 
 Ford shares closed up about 3.8 percent. GM shares rose about 0.9 
		percent.
 
 TRUMP NOTIFIED
 
 Top Ford executives personally notified Trump and Vice President-elect 
		Mike Pence of their decision. Fields praised tax and regulatory 
		proposals advocated by Trump and his fellow Republicans who control 
		Congress.
 
		 
			
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			Ford Motor Co. president and CEO Mark Fields makes a major 
			announcement during a news conference at the Flat Rock Assembly 
			Plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, U.S. January 3, 2017. REUTERS/Rebecca 
			Cook 
            
			 
"Our 
view is that we see a more positive U.S. manufacturing business environment 
under President-elect Trump and the pro-growth policies and proposals that he's 
talking about, so this is a vote of confidence for President-elect Trump and 
some of the policies that they may be pursuing," Fields said. 
Union 
workers gathered at the Flat Rock factory cheered Fields' announcement. Hiring 
of the 700 new workers there will probably start in 2018 with the majority of it 
in 2020, Fields said.
 Trump said during the presidential campaign that if elected he would not allow 
Ford to open the new plant in Mexico and would slap hefty tariffs on imported 
Ford vehicles. Trump also accused Mexico of sending criminals and rapists into 
the United States and vowed to build a border wall to combat illegal 
immigration.
 
 Since winning the Nov. 8 election, Trump has targeted a wide range of American 
companies also including United Technologies Inc, Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin 
Corp. Trump also has touted decisions by companies to keep some production in 
the United States, including United's Carrier unit in Indiana.
 
Trump 
previously vowed to hit companies that shift production from America to other 
countries with a 35 percent tax on their exports into the United States. He also 
has denounced the North American Free Trade Agreement between the United States, 
Mexico and Canada.
 Fields said there were no negotiations between Ford and the incoming president 
over canceling the Mexico plant or investing in Michigan.
 
 
Ford will build a battery electric SUV with a 300-mile (482-km) driving range at 
the Michigan plant by 2020, and will launch production there by 2021 of a fully 
autonomous vehicle without a steering wheel or a brake pedal for use in ride 
services fleets. Ford also plans new hybrid versions of its F-150 pickup truck, 
Mustang and police vehicles by 2020.
 GM said it sold about 190,000 Cruze cars in the United States in 2016. All of 
the sedan versions sold in the United States, about 185,500, were built at its 
Lordstown, Ohio plant. About 4,500 hatchback Cruze versions were assembled in 
Mexico and sold in the United States.
 
 (Additional reporting by David Alire Garcia in Mexico City; Writing by Will 
Dunham; Editing by Alistair Bell)
 
				 
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