AP:
Here is a look at the committee's ties to Toyota and other automakers:
_Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va.: The Senate's lead Toyota investigator has known Toyota's founding family for decades and credits himself with helping to persuade the company to build a factory in his state. He walked through fields with Toyota executives scouting locations and has said that by the time Toyota picked Buffalo, W.Va., "I felt like a full-fledged member of that site selection team."
_Former committee staffer David L. Strickland: Now heads the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, whose actions on Toyota safety issues are part of Rockefeller's inquiry. A Republican senator asked Strickland at his confirmation hearing whether he could disagree with Rockefeller, his former boss. Strickland said that when he was at the committee, Rockefeller signed his paychecks and what the senator said went, but that in his NHTSA role he could disagree with Rockefeller.
_Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss.: Helped attract a Toyota factory to Blue Springs, Miss., an area he represented as a congressman, and steered federal money to the project. After Toyota announced the site in 2007, Wicker called it "a new era in manufacturing excellence in Northeast Mississippi." Toyota announced in late 2008 that it would delay production at the plant, where it planned to make the Prius hybrid. Wicker has said he is confident that after Toyota spent millions on the factory, it won't walk away from it and will start building cars there when the economy improves. Wicker has commuted from a Virginia condo to the Senate in a Toyota Paseo, saying "it may be the rattiest car in the entire U.S. Senate."
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