Business

Detroit History Podcast: GM Spied on a Gadfly in the '60s and Got Caught

November 14, 2021, 9:44 PM


Ralph Nader

GM spied on a gadfly and got caught. It was the '60s, and it changed the auto industry forever.

When consumer advocate Ralph Nader began hounding Detroit to produce safer cars, the world's largest corporation took affront and took action. Its chairman, James Roche, had to apologize in U.S. Senate chambers.

Nader's rise from obscure author to agent of change may have been solidified in that moment. And the manufacture of automobiles transitioned from a nearly unregulated industry to an intense object of safety and environmental standards. We follow this trail with veteran auto writer Dave Smith and Kenneth Whyte, author of the book. "The Sack of Detroit: General Motors and the End of American Enterprise."

-- Tim Kiska



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