Stellantis and Viking Group Choose Right to Work Indiana
Stellantis and Viking Group are both choosing to invest in Right to Work Indiana and will also be creating 376 new jobs as a result.
In an Investor’s Business Daily op-ed this week, National Right to Work President Mark Mix exposes the collusion between United Auto Workers (UAW) union chiefs and General Motors (GM) management to secure yet another taxpayer bailout:
…GM leaders and the UAW officials who colluded with them to extract $43 billion out of taxpayers in exchange for arguably worthless stock are now patting themselves on the back for paying back on April 21 the balance of a $6.7 billion loan they took out from taxpayers as part of the 2009 bankruptcy package.
In a weekly radio address to the nation late last month, President Obama suggested that the fact that taxpayers have now recouped 14% of the taxes he diverted into GM coffers on their behalf vindicates his decision to bail out GM and the UAW brass.
But ordinary Americans, with whom the GM and Chrysler bailouts have become overwhelmingly unpopular over the past year, are unlikely to agree. Especially not if they learn that GM was able to “pay back” the loan only because it had not yet spent all of the other $43 billion in taxpayer money it raked in last year.
Read the rest of the op-ed by clicking here.
Stellantis and Viking Group are both choosing to invest in Right to Work Indiana and will also be creating 376 new jobs as a result.
Companies investing in Right to Work Arizona include Optimal Health Systems, as well as Ecobat and HyRel Technologies.
Businesses investing in Right to Work Florida include Kaseya, Danone North America, LeverX, and Kroger.