In killing the Detroit bailout this week, Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Toyota joined his colleagues Dick Shelby of Honda and Bob Corker of Nissan in upholding a basic American principle: Blame all economic woes on greedy unions.
After shoveling billions out the door for Wall Street bastions of free enterprise, McConnell expressed the worry that “a government big enough to give us everything we want is a government big enough to take everything we have.”
There is enough fault in the failing auto industry to go around–management, labor, shareholders and consumers–but taking cheap shots at the health and pension benefits of organized workers as the root of it all is a perfect example of what the great journalist Murray Kempton described half a century ago:
“There is a certain kind of politician who stays safely in the hills during a battle and then comes down and shoots the wounded.”
McConnell and his coterie of Southern senators, including Louisiana’s David Vitter and South Carolina’s Jim DeMint, all represent states with foreign-owned, non-union plants that would benefit from the disappearance of the American auto industry, no matter how much havoc it would wreak on the country as a whole.