Product Description
The first real look inside Team Obama due just before the 2010 elections mixes political warfare and big business
shakeups in equal proportions, and comes from a uniquely informed source. Steve Rattner is not just the man brought in
by the president to save the auto industry, he is a former New York Times financial reporter who also earned a place
among the top tier of Wall Street s most informed investment bankers and corporate experts. Now, from his vantage point
at the helm of the historic auto-industry intervention, Rattner crafts a tightly plotted narrative of political
brinkmanship, corporate mismanagement, and personalities under pressure in a high-stakes clash between Washington and
Detroit. He also explains the tough choices he and his team made, working against a ticking clock and facing vocal
sition from free market champions, to keep Chrysler and General Motors in operation.
As the economy faced free fall, Obama, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, and economic advisor Larry Summers all
revealingly described faced the possibility of more than a million lost jobs and the astonishing wreckage of GM (a
nightmare of huge proportions, caused by terrible management) and Chrysler (a company so close to death it was nearly
sacrificed). Rattner s book which will take the story up to the fall of 2010 is a gripping account of one of the
severest crises of President Obama s first year in office, with lessons relevant for all managers and executives.
Amazon Exclusive: A Q&A with Author Steven Rattner
Q: Why did you write this book?
A: I am exceptionally proud of the leadership that President Obama and his senior advisers showed in insisting that we
do the right thing, as sed to the expedient thing, and felt that that story deserved to be told.
Q: Most Washington memoirs tend to be either dry policy books or centered on the author’s recollections. How does
yours differ?
A: I did not want to write either an unreadable quasi-academic tome or a book about me! So I decided to use my
background as a journalist to "report out" the story, extending it to include events before and after my time at the
Treasury. I interviewed more than 150 people, covering a period that began with the decision by the Bush administration
to provide GM and Chrysler with bridge financing and ended with GM’s filing of its initial public offering and its
naming of Dan Akerson as CEO. And I also tried to use my journalistic training to write the book in a lively, engaging
manner.
Q: Are there any particular ways that you tried to make the book readable?
A: I tried to bring to life the many interesting characters who were part of this extraordinary restructuring. I came
away from my time in Washington with enormous respect for President Obama, Rahm Emanuel, Tim Geithner, Larry Summers,
and many others, and I thought readers would be interested in human portraits of these exceptional people. I also got to
know the CEOs and other key players in the auto industry and worked hard to also bring them to life for readers.
Q: Most Americans these days have a low opinion of Washington and what goes on there. As a newcomer to government,
how did you find your experience?
A: It was eye-opening. On the one hand, because of President Obama’s leadership and because of the existence of the
Troubled Asset Program (better known as "TARP"), we were able to successfully restructure these companies using
the bankruptcy process and $82 billion of TARP money. But I also learned that the success of the auto effort was quite
unusual by Washington standards because almost any other initiative would require congressional approval, and Congress
is every bit as dysfunctional as polls suggest Americans believe that it is. If we had had to secure congressional
approval of the auto bailout, I have no doubt that at least one or both of the automakers would have ended up running
out of money, going into an uncontrolled bankruptcy, and liquidating, possibly putting a million more Americans out of
work and causing a depression in the Midwest.
Q: Some commentators say that the government should not be making these kinds of interventions. They argue that the
market should be allowed to work.
A: I agree that wherever possible, the market should be allowed to work. But in this case, we had no alternative. GM
and Chrysler were running out of money, financial markets were frozen and there was no possibility of them raising
additional funds, either in or outside of bankruptcy. So without government help, the entire auto sector would have
collapsed, with disastrous economic consequences.
Q: What was it like to work in Washington on a day-to-day basis?
A: It’s certainly different from my previous positions in the private sector. In writing the book, I tried to paint a
picture of what working in the world’s largest and most powerful bureaucracy is really like, with revealing, sometimes
humorous anecdotes. For example, I ended up paying for beverages and lunch every time we had visitors; the Treasury had
no budget for such things. Even getting visitors cleared for entry into the Treasury building could be challenging—one
guest who had flown in from Detroit ended up having to speak to us from a nearby Starbucks. On the other hand, when you
call and say you are from the U.S. Treasury, you get a very different response from when you call from a private
investment firm!
Q: What is your outlook for the auto companies?
A: It’s too early to say for sure, but the preliminary indications suggest that both GM and Chrysler are on a path to
sustained viability. GM has now reported two quarters of significant net income, and with luck it will complete its
initial public offering in November. Chrysler still needs to successfully fill out its product line, but its financial
results to date are also well ahead of our expectations. The new management teams at GM and Chrysler have already made a
huge difference—management matters!
- Collectible Collectors Book.
- political drama as the U S economy.
- transforming an iconic American industry.