Ford pauses U.S. social media advertising for 30 days

Ford Motor Co. said Monday it would pause advertising on all social media platforms in the United States for the next 30 days, joining a growing list of companies that have stopped spending on Facebook Inc. in support of a campaign that called out the company for not doing enough to stop hate speech on its platform.

The automaker said it would re-evaluate its presence on all social media platforms and added that hate speech, violence and racial injustice in content on social media "needs to be eradicated." A spokesman said Ford is evaluating such spending in other regions.

Last week Honda Motor Co.’s U.S. automobile division said it would withhold its advertising on Facebook and Instagram for the month of July.

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Geneva auto show canceled for 2021

The Geneva auto show will not be held in 2021, the organizers have announced.

The reasons for the cancellation were lack of interest from automakers as well as the uncertain situation over the control of the coronavirus, the Geneva International Motor Show (GIMS) Foundation said in a statement on Monday.

The Geneva event is Europe’s only major international auto show to be held annually. This year's event was due to take place in March but was canceled just days before opening as the seriousness of the coronavirus pandemic became clear.

"A majority of GIMS exhibitors who took part in a survey stated that they would probably not participate in a 2021 edition and that they would prefer to have a GIMS in 2022," the foundation said in the statement.

A 2022 show was not confirmed.

Holding the show next year without automaker support might kill it off for good, GIMS Director General Sandro Mesquita told Automotive News Europe in an interview in M…

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Court backs president's right to fire CFPB director

The Supreme Court ruled Monday that the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may be removed by the president for any reason, reversing the agency's foundational pillar that it should operate independent of presidential or congressional intervention.

The court in a 5-4 ruling said the current structure of the federal watchdog is "unconstitutional" without oversight from the executive branch. Previously, the CFPB director could only be removed by the president for "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office."

Spearheaded by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the bureau was granted broad jurisdiction to pursue and penalize businesses in the consumer financial product industry for practices it considered abusive, unfair or deceptive after passage of the Dodd-Frank Act.

Automotive finance experts have long insisted the bureau's reach was too broad under a single director. Celia Win…

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Ex-UAW President Dennis Williams returns $55,000 in travel expenses

DETROIT — Ex-UAW President Dennis Williams has returned $55,000 in travel expenses to the union following an internal review of expenditures.

In a Monday statement to members, President Rory Gamble said the expenses were found to have been "not appropriate" but he did not detail where they came from. Additionally, he said the union was finalizing the sale of a cabin in northern Michigan, built in part with nonunion labor, for Williams' use.

"As I said from day one, we are committed to recovering any and all dues funds that have been misappropriately spent," Gamble wrote. "I hope this sends a strong message to all UAW leadership that you are stewards of sacred dues dollars and we will do whatever is necessary to protect that oath of office."

The update comes a day before Gamble is set to meet with U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider to discuss reform efforts. Since becoming UAW president in November, Gamble has attempted to show that the union can clean itsel…

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John Mooney, the force behind catalytic converters, dies at 90

The Society of Automotive Engineers considers it among the top inventions since the dawn of the automobile. The EPA says it has saved thousands of lives and prevented hundreds of thousands of throat and lung ailments. In California, it is responsible for abating much of the yellow air, first studied in the 1950s, that has hovered over the greater Los Angeles basin for decades.

The modern catalytic converter, which scrubs smog- and soot-producing hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides from automobile exhausts, has revolutionized air pollution controls with its invention in the 1970s.

It was the brainchild of two chemical engineers, John Mooney and his boss, Carl Keith, as well as a small team of their colleagues at Engelhard Corp.

Mooney, who died June 16 at home in Wyckoff, N.J., at age 90, is credited with the big breakthrough.

Catalytic converter development began in the '50s, was spurred by federal regu…

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U.S. appeals court stays order requiring GM, FCA CEOs to meet

DETROIT -- A U.S. appeals court on Monday stayed a lower court's order requiring the CEOs of General Motors and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles to meet to resolve GM's racketeering lawsuit.

"In order to provide sufficient time to consider the matters raised in GM’s petition, and having considered the relevant factors, we conclude that a temporary stay is appropriate," the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in a court filing.

GM said in a statement that it looked forward to the appeals court's review and decision. FCA in a statement reiterated GM's lawsuit was meritless and in a filing called on the appeals court to deny GM's request to reassign the case to a new judge.

On Friday, GM asked a U.S. appeals court to allow it to continue pursuing its civil racketeering lawsuit against FCA, rejecting U.S. District Court Judge Paul Borman's belittling of the complaint. The No. 1 U.S. automaker called Borman's order "unprecedented" and "a profound abuse" of jud…

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Online used-vehicle seller Shift to go public through reverse merger

Online used-vehicle seller Shift Technologies said Monday it plans to go public later this year through a reverse merger, as U.S. capital markets rebound after the coronavirus crisis forced companies to halt new listings.

Shift's listing also highlights the strong appetite for new stock offerings by companies with an online-focused business against the backdrop of shelter-at-home orders and social distancing norms because of the pandemic.

Rival Vroom Inc. listed its shares earlier this month, with its stock price more than doubling on its debut.

Shift will merge with Insurance Acquisition Corp., a special purpose acquisition company that has no operations of its own. The SPAC will raise $185 million by selling its shares, valuing the combined company at $730 million on a pro forma basis, the companies said in a statement.

A SPAC allows a private company to go public by avoiding the trouble of filing paperwork with regulators and dealing with marke…

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GM Defense lands $214 million Army contract

DETROIT -- GM Defense landed a $214.3 million contract to build infantry squad vehicles for the U.S. Army.

Based on the 2020 Chevrolet Colorado ZR2 midsize truck's architecture, each vehicle will have "a cargo superstructure powered by a 186-horsepower, 2.8L Duramax turbo-diesel engine, and six-speed automatic transmission," GM said in a statement on Saturday.

The Army authorized the purchase of 649 vehicles and can increase that to 1,070 to reach the full $214.3 million amount. If the Army expands production to 2,065 vehicles, then more dollars would be allotted to the contract.

GM Defense will build and receive payment for 27 vehicles in the first year of the contract. The first eight are due on Oct. 27 for production qualification testing.

Ricardo Defense Inc., which specializes in government defense programs, will partner with GM Defense to "support key product logistics and fielding requirements."

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Toyota ramps up Japan plants to fuel the U.S. market comeback

TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. will open the taps on production in Japan to expedite shipments to the U.S., where local factories are still slowly ramping up and inventories are evaporating.

Toyota's return to production in Japan occurred quickly, after dialing back plans in the face of diminished sales as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Toyota now plans to ramp up Japan production to 90 percent of pre-pandemic levels, and it is prioritizing models that it exports to the U.S.

Toyota's Japan production was down 40 percent in June, as the company responded to plunging demand. But for July, volumes will be down only 10 percent.

Giving new priority to U.S. retailers mostly will affect production that had been earmarked for Japan, mainland Asia and Middle East markets, Toyota said.

The plan unfolds as U.S. shoppers emerge from weeks of lockdown and business closings, hungry for vehicles and pressuring deplete…

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Bringing back the Bronco

HOLLY, Mich. — Dave Pericak smiles as he hops in the driver's seat of a topless 1971 baby blue Ford Bronco.

The late-afternoon sun glints off his Aviator sunglasses as he turns the key and the restored SUV rumbles to life.

Pericak is finishing a long day of shooting promotional material for the July reveal of the 2021 Bronco — a storied nameplate Ford is reviving after a 24-year hiatus — but not before he takes the classic model for a spin with a reporter through an off-road park about an hour north of Detroit.

"How often do you get to drive something like this?" he asks as the Bronco bounds along uneven dirt trails.

For Pericak, 49, the answer is: a lot. He's director of "Ford Icons," a new role that includes stewardship of the Bronco, the Mustang and the GT supercar, as well as Raptor-badged pickups.

But among the litany of venerable products he took responsibility for in January 2019, one stood apart.

The Bronco retains a cult f…

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Kicks hints at Nissan's global e-Power push

TOKYO — Nissan's e-Power hybrid system is finally getting an international run that foreshadows the automaker's plan to introduce the technology globally.

Nissan is deploying the electrified powertrain in a version of the Kicks subcompact crossover that it will sell in Thailand and Japan.

Nissan hasn't confirmed U.S. launch plans for e-Power or said whether the U.S. version of the Kicks will get it. But engineers and product planners have said the company intends to eventually introduce a high-power version of the gasoline-electric system stateside.

Nissan unveiled the Kicks e-Power in Japan last week. The model is assembled in Thailand and initially will be sold there and in Japan. The U.S. version of the Kicks is built in Mexico, sharing its platform with the Versa, also made in Mexico.

Internationally, the lack of a hybrid option on the redesigned Rogue compact crossover, Nissan's top-selling nameplate in the U.S.,…

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Resurgent virus may slow sales recovery

The second quarter made clear that U.S. auto sales are in recovery mode.

The question heading into the third quarter, with COVID-19 cases surging in major automotive markets in California, Florida and Texas, is whether the upward trend will continue.

The industry bounced back from a treacherous decline in March and early April, helped by particularly resilient demand for pickups, after the pandemic confined millions to their homes and cut off traffic to dealerships. On the used- vehicle side, certified pre-owned sales last month were on par with February's, analysts said.

But the market lost some momentum in late June, said Jonathan Smoke, chief economist for Cox Automotive. A rebound in coronavirus cases could cause some people to second-guess going out, Smoke said, and the big discounts that drew customers in April and May aren't as prevalent now.

That combination, Smoke said, is "probably going to produce a June that won't b…

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