Gloves Have Come Off Between Toyota & Government Funded GM
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Updated: 4:11 PM Mar 9, 2010
Gloves Have Come Off Between Toyota & Government Funded GM
Within days after Toyota leaders testified in front of Congress about it's sticking gas pedals and ordered recalls, General Motors began targeting Toyota customers with special incentives. Now Toyota dealers in the U.S. have taken off their gloves and come out with a scathing letter attacking GM's tactics
Posted: 10:23 AM Mar 9, 2010
Reporter: Mike George
Email Address: george@kbtx.com
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Within days after Toyota leaders testified in front of Congress about it's sticking gas pedals and ordered recalls, General Motors began targeting Toyota customers with special incentives.

Now Toyota dealers in the U.S. have taken off their gloves and come out with a scathing letter attacking GM's tactics. The following media release details the discontent:

March 9, 2010—Today, Toyota dealers across the country are speaking out against General Motors using taxpayer dollars to fund unfair tactics that undermine their businesses. Last week, General Motors launched a nationwide predatory advertising campaign that uses fear in an attempt to lure customers away from Toyota and Lexus dealers.

“Toyota dealers across the country are business owners who stimulate local economies and pay taxes to the government,” said Paul Atkinson, President of the Toyota National Dealer Council and owner of Atkinson Toyota in Texas. “It is outrageous that GM is using our taxpayer dollars against us, making me and other Toyota dealers pay to undermine our own businesses.”

According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the U.S. government owns 60 percent of the equity in General Motors.

“These incentives fail to take into account that, despite some recent problems, Toyota still makes some of the best cars, trucks and SUVs on the road in America,” Atkinson continued. “These low-blow tactics pose a real threat to the citizens of the United States if the government lets these slip by.”

Last week, Toyota executives wrapped up congressional testimony before the House Energy and Commerce Committee, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and, most recently, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation.

“In open and honest testimony before Congress, Toyota executives clearly demonstrated that Toyota is committed to working with regulators to ensure the safety of American drivers,” said Atkinson. “It is time for the U.S. government to stop funding these predatory incentives that discourage fellow American citizens from doing business with me. GM said it themselves, ‘May the best car win.’”


Latest Comments

Posted by: Bettaman Location: Texas on Mar 17, 2010 at 11:01 PM

If the Toyota brand is sooo good, why do they sell more used American vehicles than new Toyotas? Why do import dealers sell any American used cars at all on their lots? Why should I empathize with anyone that sells import cars knowing the money doesn't stay here in America.Why should I be mad at my government for helping an American company? I am American and I have an import vehicle.I am not proud of this but I live with it, until it takes off running and kills somebody.Then it won't matter, another American dies and I won't have the opportunity to apologize for my government putting a halt to that which is killing the most preciously screwed up people the world aspires to emmulate, Americans!
Posted by: Jay Location: College Station on Mar 10, 2010 at 02:47 PM

Censorship is the suppression of speech or deletion of communicative material which may be considered objectionable, harmful, sensitive, or inconvenient to the government or media organizations as determined by a censor. Just thought you should know.
Posted by: TeaPot on Mar 10, 2010 at 06:41 AM

"I don't remember GM or it's dealers crying about our tax dollars being used on the cash for clunkers program. These dollars were available for all automobile manufacturers." And the fact that our Tax Dollars are now being used SPECIFICALLY AGAINST Toyota is the difference (and the problem). The US has boyucotted and tarriffed foreign goods that were subsidized by Japan and Korea and China's governments in order to weaken our domestic competitors, why should we start doing it now?
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