News

Actions

President Trump, GM's Mary Barra meet in the Oval Office on Thursday

Posted
and last updated

President Donald Trump met with General Motors CEO and Chair Mary Barra in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon. According to the president's daily schedule, the meeting was scheduled to happen at 1:45 p.m. but will be private.

The meeting comes amid the president's public frustration with the Detroit-based automaker. As recently as Aug. 30, he tweeted about GM, saying that it is "one of the smallest auto manufacturers" in Detroit.

Trump has publicly pressured GM, saying they should bring jobs back to the United States, and has tweeted a dozen times about GM since he became president.

He was also upset at the closing of the Lordstown, Ohio plant, which was one of several plants GM announced would be closed last year.

"I am not happy that it is closed when everything else in our country is BOOMING," Trump tweeted on March 17. "I asked her to sell it or do something quickly. She blamed the UAW Union – I don't care, I just want it open!"

A day after that tweet, Trump also tweeted that the UAW and GM would start talks in September or October. Earlier this week, the UAW said it would begin contract negotiations with General Motors first, while the union also voted to authorize a strike if a contract isn't negotiated before the current one expires later this month.

Trump has made the auto industry one of his biggest focuses during his presidency, and just days after his inauguration in January 2017, he met with the CEOs of the Big 3.

While we're awaiting word from either Trump or Barra on their private meeting, workers at the GM Pontiac Metal Center are talking.

They're concerned about their future, jobs and plant closings. 80 workers here were given pink slips in March as production at the GM Poletown plant was reduced. That Detroit-Hamtramck plant is among the four GM plants to close. The Pontiac Metal Center is also a feeder plant to GM Orion Assembly which has been given new investment to keep operating in the future.

Workers in Pontiac say they're glad President Trump continues to pressure Barra about keeping jobs in the US. But that doesn't mean they're going to vote for him.

GM is also negotiating a new contract with the United Auto Workers Union, the first of the big 3. Roland Trevino is a shop committeeman in Pontiac and he says nothing has leaked out about the ongoing talks. He says he's been with the company 44 years and has never seen that happen.

Check out some of Trump's tweets about GM below.