BREAKING: GM Halts Operations in Canada — Ottawa Strikes Back as Rachel Maddow Reacts

The Corporate Cannibalism of General Motors: A Masterclass in Betrayal
General Motors has spent decades branding itself as the “iconic American company,” the engine of the middle class, and the patriot of the assembly line. But as we see in the wreckage of its Canadian operations, GM’s only true loyalty is to the highest bidder and the lowest wage. What we are witnessing in Oshawa and Ingersoll isn’t “market realignment”—it is a calculated, cold-blooded abandonment of workers, fueled by a trade environment that has become a playground for corporate greed.
GM didn’t just trim the fat; they amputated healthy limbs. By slashing a production shift in Oshawa and killing the BrightDrop electric van project at the CAMI plant, they have effectively evaporated over 2,000 direct manufacturing jobs in under six months. If you include the supply chain—the parts makers and the local businesses that actually sustain a community—the casualty count blows past 3,000. And why? Because the 25% tariff wall has given GM the perfect “get out of jail free” card to move production wherever labor is cheapest and job security is non-existent.
The Shell Game of Job Creation
The hypocrisy is breathtaking. While GM was showing 1,200 Canadian workers the door in Oshawa, they were busy hiring 250 “temporary” workers at their plant in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Both plants build the Chevrolet Silverado. This isn’t a victory for the American worker; it’s a victory for the GM balance sheet.
They took 50,000 units of truck production out of Canada and moved it to Indiana, but they didn’t replace stable, middle-class Canadian jobs with stable, middle-class American ones. They replaced them with precarious, low-benefit temporary positions. GM is using the current trade war as a smokescreen to restructure its labor costs, pitting worker against worker across a border that used to be a bridge. It’s a race to the bottom, and GM is driving the lead car.
The Billion-Dollar Clawback: Ottawa Finds a Backbone
For years, multinational corporations have treated government subsidies like an ATM—withdraw the cash, make the promises, and then vanish the moment a better deal appears elsewhere. But Canada’s Industry Minister, Mélanie Joly, just signaled that the era of the “free lunch” is over.
The Canadian government is now moving to claw back every cent of public funding given to GM. It is a seismic shift in corporate-state relations. If you take taxpayer money to create jobs and then move those jobs to Indiana a few years later, you don’t get to keep the change. Ottawa’s message is clear: if you abandon our workers, we will seize your assets. They’ve already served default notices to Stellantis, and GM is next in the crosshairs. It’s about time someone treated these corporate nomads with the same level of ruthlessness they show their employees.

The Oracle’s Exit: Why Buffett Bailed
When Warren Buffett dumps an entire position in an American icon like General Motors, you don’t look at the stock price; you look at the rot in the foundation. Buffett and the late Charlie Munger warned for years that the auto industry was “too tough”—razor-thin margins, crushing capital requirements, and a regulatory minefield.
But the real reason Buffett exited is the weaponization of trade. He has been vocal that tariffs are an “act of war” and that using trade as a weapon is fundamentally dangerous. Buffett is now sitting on a staggering $347 billion in cash. He isn’t waiting for a dip; he is waiting for the storm to pass. When the greatest investor in history decides that the “American icon” is no longer a safe place for capital, it’s a flashing red light for the rest of the world. He sees a future where trade policy is dictated by noise rather than numbers, and he wants no part of it.
The EV Mirage and the Death of Stability
The collapse of the BrightDrop van project at the CAMI plant is perhaps the most damning evidence of GM’s incompetence. They spent $1 billion to retool that plant for the “electric future.” They promised 50,000 vans a year. They sold fewer than 4,000 in 2025.
GM took a $7.2 billion writedown on its EV business because their projections were a fantasy. They built a plant for a market that didn’t exist, and when the tariffs made the math even uglier, they simply pulled the plug, leaving 1,000 families in Ingersoll to pay for their executive-level delusions. This is the end of the era of North American manufacturing stability. We have replaced efficiency with nationalism and long-term planning with political knee-jerks.
The Ghost of Flint
Oshawa and Ingersoll are looking at their reflection in the water of Flint, Michigan, and they are terrified. GM was born in Flint, sucked it dry, and then hollowed it out until it was a shell of a city. The same pattern is repeating in Ontario. The restaurants are emptying, the daycares are closing, and the generational pride of being an “auto family” is being replaced by the desperation of the unemployed.
This isn’t just a Canadian problem. When car prices spike by the middle of 2026 because of these 25% duties, every American walking onto a dealership lot will feel the sting of GM’s “realignment.” You aren’t “winning” a trade war when your own companies are bleeding billions, your neighbors are being devastated, and your next vehicle costs $10,000 more because the supply chain was sacrificed for a soundbite.
GM isn’t fighting for America; it’s fighting for its own survival at the expense of everyone else. The foundation of the North American auto industry is cracking, and the only thing GM is building in its place is a monument to corporate betrayal.