Trump tells GM: Stop 'wasting time', build ventilators
to address coronavirus
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[March 28, 2020] By
David Shepardson and Ben Klayman
WASHINGTON/
DETROIT (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump on Friday invoked emergency powers to require
General Motors Co to build much-needed ventilators for coronavirus
patients after he accused the largest U.S. automaker of "wasting time"
during negotiations.
Trump, who has been on the defensive for not moving faster to compel the
production of medical equipment, for the first time invoked the Defense
Production Act, saying GM was not moving quickly enough even though
earlier on Friday the largest U.S. automaker announced it would begin
building ventilators in the coming weeks.
Asked about negotiations with GM over ventilators, Trump expressed anger
with the company's decision to close an assembly plant in politically
important Ohio. He also criticized GM's prior decisions to build plants
outside the United States.
"I didn't go into it with a favorable view," Trump told a news
conference of the GM talks. White House adviser Peter Navarro said the
administration ran into "roadblocks" with GM this week.
GM said in a statement in response to Trump that it has been working
with ventilator firm Ventec Life Systems and GM suppliers "around the
clock for over a week to meet this urgent need" and said its commitment
to Ventec's ventilators "has never wavered."
The act grants the president power to expand industrial production of
any key materials or products for national security and other reasons.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and other Democrats have urged him to
invoke the act, but the president had been reluctant to do so until now.
Democratic U.S. Senator Ed Markey said, "About time. Now, tell us every
day: which companies will be making more of this equipment, how much is
being made, and where the equipment is going."
On Friday, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the United
States topped 100,000, the highest in the world according to a Reuters
tally. The U.S. death toll topped 1,550. [L1N2BK21G]
Trump also said countries such as the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain and
Italy need ventilators and that if the excess volume is not needed, the
United States can export them.
Earlier, Trump lashed out at GM and Ford Motor Co for moving too slowly
just hours before GM said it would build medical equipment at an Indiana
plant.
Trump criticized the U.S. automakers and said he expected the United
States would make or obtain 100,000 additional ventilators within the
next 100 days.
The attack on the automakers coincided with rising tension between Trump
and the Democratic governors of New York and Michigan, who have
criticized the administration's response to the COVID-19 epidemic. On
Thursday evening, Trump questioned in an interview on the Fox News
network whether New York state needed 30,000 ventilators to cope with
rising numbers of coronavirus patients, as Cuomo had said.
GM and Ford separately announced earlier this week they were working
with medical equipment companies to help boost ventilator production.
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A ventilator is seen at the New York City Emergency Management
Warehouse, where 400 ventilators arrived and before being shipped
out for distribution, due to concerns over the rapid spread of
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Brooklyn borough of New York
City, U.S., March 24, 2020. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs/File Photo
GM and its partner Ventec confirmed after Trump's tweets that the No. 1 U.S.
automaker would deploy 1,000 workers to build ventilators at its Kokomo,
Indiana, parts plant and ship as soon as next month. It was aiming to build more
than 10,000 per month with the ability to go higher. Suppliers in the effort
were told the target was 200,000 ventilators.
But early Friday, before GM issued its release, Trump attacked the automaker and
Chief Executive Mary Barra on Twitter, reviving his grievance with Barra for
closing and selling a car factory in Ohio, a state critical to the president's
re-election campaign.
"General Motors MUST immediately open their stupidly abandoned Lordstown plant
in Ohio, or some other plant, and START MAKING VENTILATORS, NOW!!!!!! FORD, GET
GOING ON VENTILATORS, FAST!!!!!!" Trump wrote on Twitter on Friday.
"They said they were going to give us 40,000 much needed ventilators, 'very
quickly'," Trump said on Twitter of GM and Ventec's effort. "Now they are saying
it will only be 6000, in late April, and they want top dollar."
Trump's comments about GM and Ford came after a New York Times story Thursday
suggested the White House had backed away from announcing a major ventilator
deal with GM and Ventec because the price tag was too high. That drew criticism
from Democrats.
Following Trump's tweets, Ford said it was moving as fast as it could to gear up
its ventilator manufacturing efforts and was in "active conversations" with the
Trump administration seeking approvals. Ford said it has "teams working flat-out
with GE Healthcare to boost production of simplified ventilators."
Other automakers have said they are working to produce ventilators, masks and
other medical equipment.
On Friday, Toyota Motor Corp said it was "finalizing agreements to begin working
with at least two companies that produce ventilators and respirators to help
increase their capacity."
New York City Mayor Bill be Blasio on Friday said on Twitter that Tesla Inc had
agreed to donate hundreds of ventilators to hospital intensive care units in New
York City and the state of New York.
Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk in response said the electric carmaker was
helping locate and deliver existing ventilators.
Tesla on Friday did not respond to a request for comment on where it got the
ventilators and whether the company was producing any ventilators of its own,
something Musk has said the company will do.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCA) and Ferrari previously said they were
exploring making ventilators in Italy.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Ben Klayman; Additional reporting by Tina
Bellon in New York and Diane Bartz, Steve Holland in Washington; Editing by
Doina Chiacu, Diane Craft and Daniel Wallis)
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