The leaders of three trade groups representing automakers,  car dealers, and motor manufacturers sent a letter to Congress March 23. In it,  the leaders of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the National Automobile  Dealers Association, and the Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association  said that the COVID-19 outbreak poses a grave threat to the United States automotive  sector and asking for assistance.
“Stalling sales and halted production threatens a vast  network of businesses in every state,” the letter says, noting that a weakened  auto sector also impacts suppliers, dealers and other businesses. According to  the letter writers, the U.S. auto industry currently accounts for $2 trillion  in economic output and about 10 million jobs. A chart accompanying the letter  shows that, of 44 assembly plants in the United States, 42 are currently on  suspended or stopped production.
The trade group leaders—John Bozzella of AAI, Peter Welch of  NADA, and Bill Long of MEMA—go on to give an example of ways Congress could  help their industries. Those policies include loan guarantees to affected  businesses, ensuring that employers receive a tax break on workers’ paid leave  at larger businesses and deferring 2020 quarterly federal tax payments. 
It also suggests that the United States’ date of entry into  force of the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement be delayed. The USMCA  agreement, a Trump Administration update of the North-American Free Trade  Agreement, or NAFTA, is currently expected to go into effect June 1. The trade  agreement imposes heavy tariffs on cars made outside of North America.