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Make Mitsubishi Weird Again

Mitsu Delica D5 Tmd Ts
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There’s a fact that always rattles around in my noggin when I see, say, a first-gen Mitsubishi Montero Sport. It’s that at one point in the 1990s, Mitsubishi was the fastest-growing Japanese carmaker in the United States. A lot has changed in the 30 years since, but it sounds like the company is going to make another run at the American market. My big ask: Don’t lose the weird.

Obviously, if every automaker listened to the recommendations in The Morning Dump, they’d all be operating at maximum operating margin (or out of business, depending on which advice they took). I’m sincere in my belief that what Mitsubishi needs to do is be a little different–something the brand is historically very good at–and some news has slipped out that makes me feel like this isn’t an impossible outcome. Will the brand’s future include electric cars? Probably, although data shows a lot of the EV market was likely captured in September, before the EV credit went away.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

That’s the hopeful side of the news today. On the other end is China. Companies in America are becoming increasingly less reliant on the country, which isn’t exactly what’s happening in Germany. Someone happy to see America move away from foreign manufacturing is UAW President Shawn Fain, but another report from a court-appointed monitor shows that retaliation seems to still be a key factor in his leadership of the union.

Tell Me About This Mitsubishi Van

Mitsubishi Delica D5 Large
Photo: Mitsubishi

Credit to Mitsubishi, the company nearly went out of business and had to be wedged into the shaky Nissan-Renault partnership. This became the “alliance,” and it lasted about as long and fared as well as a jar of Kewpie Mayo left in the trunk of a Mirage in a Phoenix parking lot in August.

Renault is all but gone, but Nissan and Mitsubishi have maintained a relationship that’s resulted in shared products that are becoming almost identical. There will be more of this, and there’s likely going to be some Honda in the mix as well.

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For the moment, though, Mitsubishi builds no cars in the United States and is targeting a price-conscious buyer, which means it’s having to deal with tariffs. Where this goes is anyone’s guess, but Mitsubishi is clearly prioritizing the North American market, and there are some interesting possibilities.

I’ve already mentioned the growing likelihood that Nissan (and maybe Honda) could share a truck platform in the United States. The Mitsubishi Triton we don’t get is capable, rugged, and just a little different in the way the best Mitsubishis are. But enough about what Mitsubishi can do for Nissan, let’s talk about what Mitsubishi can do for itself.

There’s an article in Automotive News that has some details from a letter to dealers and a trip Mitsubishi dealers took to Japan, and there’s something here to get excited about:

In a Nov. 14 letter to retailers, Mitsubishi Motors North America CEO Mark Chaffin hinted at “a strategic shift” in the product plan that he said “would significantly strengthen” the brand’s sales potential in the U.S.

“While details remain confidential, this could represent a game-changing moment for Mitsubishi dealers,” Chaffin said in the memo reviewed by Automotive News.

Ok, but what does that mean? The chair of the dealer board, R.C. Hill, said he wants a midsize sedan since most of the OEMs are getting out of the space. He also pointed out the obvious, which is that everyone wants a truck. But there’s a little detail here that caught my attention:

The automaker plans to introduce an electric small crossover next summer, followed by a rugged variant of its Outlander compact crossover. Further out in the pipeline are an electrified crossover and a sporty passenger van.

Mitsubishi gave nine U.S. retailers, including Hill, a peek into the future at its assembly plant in Okazaki, Japan, on Nov. 7.

“Mitsubishi has committed to North America,” Hill said. “There is a plan, there are vehicles, and they’re uniquely different.”

The rugged Outlander variant isn’t a surprise, nor is a three-row SUV, but the van is cool. Mitsubishi makes the Delica, whose older variants people love to import (I saw an imported one just yesterday, driving around the New York ‘burbs). Currently, the brand is on the D:5 generation vehicle, which rules. We even briefly got the Delica here as the Mitsubishi “van” for a while. It’s the newer, stranger, Space Exceed-ier ones that people seem to love, though.

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And that’s what Mitsubishi does best, historically. It’s different. The Eclipse was a unique and forward-thinking sort of sports car. The Lancer Evo was a novel kind of hi-po sedan. Even the Outlander Sport was an alternative take on the SUV before other automakers caught on to the concept.

If Mitsubishi tries to be Toyota, it will fail. You cannot out-Toyota Toyota, nor can a smaller brand out-Honda Honda. It shouldn’t even try. It should just be different. The company’s move into PHEVs when other brands were abandoning hybrids showed how the brand could be clever, and I want to see more cleverness.

EV Hits The 10%+ Share Number

2026 Mustang Mach E Gt California Special 09
Photo credit: Ford

The expiration of EV tax credits definitely pulled forward a bunch of electric cars, and as predicted, this meant the market beat the magic share number of 10%. It was even bigger in September, when registration data showed that the market hit more than 12% share, according to S&P Global Mobility via Automotive News:

“It was sort of an incentive on steroids,” said Tom Libby, director of industry analysis at S&P Global Mobility. The Sept. 30 end of the $7,500 tax break “was much more impactful than when a normal incentive ends. It was an extraordinary month.”

Registrations for full EVs, not including hybrids, reached a record 168,468 vehicles in September, pushing EV share of the light-vehicle market to 12.4 percent, a gain of 3.7 percentage points from the year-earlier month, S&P Global Mobility said.

That’s cool, but what’s also interesting are the winners and losers. Tesla sold the most, obviously, but its share only increased by 33%, compared to 92% for Chevrolet and 92% for Ford. The biggest percentage increase for a major brand was Audi at 244%, and the biggest drops were Toyota at -88% and VinFast at -73%.

Curiously, 20 people seem to have purchased iPaces, I guess? There were 20 registrations for electric Jags. Were those all Waymos?

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German Companies Just Can’t Quit China

Santana Vid1
Source: VW

There’s a part of me that wants to non-ironically import a long wheelbase Volkswagen Santana to the United States, though I can’t entirely articulate why. It’s an interesting symbol of a time when the relaxation of trade with China benefited both Germany and China. This is a very Eurocentric view, of course, as the massively smaller country (Germany) was the one that made huge profits.

Germany’s reliance on China hasn’t gone as well lately, as Chinese automakers show they can build a better car for the German market than German brands like Porsche and Mercedes. Does this mean there will be a move away from China?

Germany Is Just Making Too Much Money in China to Back Away Now” is the title of a recent Bloomberg report on the relationship, and the thesis is… German companies can’t escape the short term allure of profits:

From autos to chemicals, the country’s biggest exporters are ignoring government pleas and pouring billions into new projects that tie their fortunes even closer to the world’s second-largest economy. German corporate investment in China jumped €1.3 billion ($1.5 billion) between 2023 and 2024, hitting €5.7 billion, according to the Mercator Institute for China Studies.

Government officials, too, have done little to change the pattern. Privately, they’re meeting and developing action plans, said people familiar with the discussions. But they’re still reluctant to intervene in foreign investment decisions. One senior German official quipped that it’s historically not in the country’s DNA, according to a person familiar with the exchange.

In recent meetings, business leaders and government officials have traded blame over the situation but offered few solutions, said people familiar with the talks, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Left untouched was the deeper question of who bears the costs of shunning China — businesses through lost profits, workers through layoffs, consumers through higher prices, or an already stretched government.

There is no easy answer. Either German companies, already shellshocked from tariffs, are going to have to take an even bigger hit to profits, or the notoriously tight German government will have to spend money.

UAW Leadership Apparently Can’t Overcome ‘Culture Of Division And Retaliation’

Shawn Fain Bosses Tears
Source: UAW

United Auto Workers leader Shawn Fain is not one to hide his feelings, which might have benefited his members during the battles the union fought over new contracts with automakers. Winning the war is one thing, but preserving the peace is something much harder and requires a different kind of leadership.

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Fain was elected, partially, in response to the corruption and culture of retaliation that permeated the old guard at the UAW. Many of those leaders were sent to prison, and a court appointed a monitor to make sure the union didn’t fall back into old habits. That court-mandated monitor seems to think the organization is backsliding and that the issue comes from the top.

A lot of this is centered around the attempted sidelining of UAW Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock. Considering the organization was mired in a scandal related to finances, the role of treasurer is a key one and requires some independence. Based on the latest report from the monitor, Neil Barofsky, that independence has been under assault:

Even the most robust structural reforms cannot be successfully implemented amidst a culture of division and retaliation. They can only thrive in a culture that embraces the Union’s ethical code and compliance rules with the same enthusiasm that it shows for a successful organizing drive or a successfully negotiated contract. Without such cultural reform, it is only a matter of time before abuse and corruption creep back into the Union as an inevitable byproduct of leaders who foster a culture of divisiveness or who treat compliance rules and ethical norms as niceties that can be discarded when they become inconvenient.

As of the date of this Thirteenth Status Report, for the reasons discussed below, the Union does not appear to be on the path to sustainable cultural reform. The reality is stark: the current prioritization of political infighting and settling personal grievances over meaningful reform are stalling improvement and undermining good faith attempts to complete the necessary compliance infrastructure. Recent experience shows this to be true. The Union spent a great deal of time and resources building a Compliance Department that could learn to guide the Union without the need for external oversight. But instead of leading the Union forward, the Compliance Department became a tool for the President’s Office in its campaign of retaliation against the Secretary-Treasurer.

Things are getting better, says the report, but not in a way that’s going to sustain the organization. Does this mean the monitor is going to stick around a little longer? That would be my guess.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

I love a claymation video! Here’s Wet Leg with “Davina McCall” and a claymation Volkswagen.

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The Big Question

Build a perfect Mitsubishi lineup for the United States. What are you doing?

Top photo: Mitsubishi

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Scott
Member
Scott
1 minute ago

That Mitsubishi van looks pretty nice actually. Kia’s got the PV5 EV van coming (I’ve seen at least one on the road testing in LA). Hyundai has the almost-quite-lovely Staria van, but I don’t know if it’s based on the PV5, or if it’s coming to America at all. 

Kewpie mayo is roughly half the price Ralph’s charges if you get it at Tokyo Central Market in https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/43/07/77/25984976/3/ratio3x2_1920.jpg and of course, you CAN leave Kewpie or any other mayo in the trunk if it’s still unopened. 😉 Just FYI (not that anyone cares) but Tokyo Central Market is probably my absolute favorite market in the LA area, after living here for more than 30 years: https://duckduckgo.com/?q=tokyo+central+market&t=opera&ia=web …there are two locations here, and one more in the San Diego area.

While I’m making local (to me) recommendations that nobody asked for, the best used bookstore in all of Los Angeles is Iliad in North Hollywood: https://www.iliadbooks.com The Last Bookstore is also impressive, but Iliad is just a bit better IMO. 🙂

3WiperB
Member
3WiperB
9 minutes ago

Wet Leg missed an opportunity here to use a different little car that’s made out of clay. Hey, hey, we’re Adobe!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F02P2JO7yfc

Tbird
Member
Tbird
12 minutes ago

The late 90’s, early 00’s Galants were very appealing in adds and on paper. I rented one on a vacation in summer ’03 and was fully underwhelmed. The I4 powertrain returned V6 economy. It was less comfortable and luxurious than the looks implied. My ’94 SHO 5 speed was a far better actual car.

Ironically, when my Chrysler 300M died in late ’09, I rented a Camry for a week and bought one.

Last edited 11 minutes ago by Tbird
Goof
Goof
28 seconds ago
Reply to  Tbird

Those Galants were basically a Dodge Stratus.

Goof
Goof
19 minutes ago

Build a perfect Mitsubishi lineup for the United States. What are you doing?

OK, but you initially said….

Make Mitsubishi Weird Again

Alright, so let’s start off with a… Minica Toppo Evolution IV.
We will never explain what happened with Minica Toppo Evolution I through III.

PresterJohn
Member
PresterJohn
42 minutes ago

On Mitsu, you’re right they need to invest in areas where there isn’t much competition while hurriedly figuring out how they’re going to increase American manufacturing. Thankfully, their parent company has deep pockets and if they want to, they can succeed.

Not sure midsize sedans is a place where they can make money in the US. Looking at the wiki page for their current global lineup, I don’t see anything that would compete in the US sedan-wise. At the cheaper end there’s nothing that would come close to competing with either the Elantra or the K4 (or the new Sentra for that matter…). At the luxury end, they don’t have the right badge which is what matters most there.

The Montero/Pajero Sport looks alright but it sounds like some development will be needed to bring it up to safety standards. Frankly their lineup abroad is really developing-market focused. The Triton maybe, but it looks like the only non-diesel engine they put in there is an NA 2.4L which isn’t going to get it done here. Perhaps the diesel will be an option if CARB finally dies, but idk if it even meets federal standards.

I’d bring over the Delica post-haste in some form and maybe dig around for some Renault rebadges in the short term. It’s gonna take some serious cash to get back into the US market in a meaningful way because they’re going to have to develop new platforms ultimately. Their PHEV tech is quite intriguing as it’s basically an EREV except at highway speeds.

Joke #119!
Joke #119!
45 minutes ago

A way more awesome Starion. But, keep the door chime of “How dry I am”

Zipn Zipn
Member
Zipn Zipn
53 minutes ago

If I were in charge of Mitsubishi I’d try to out-scout Scout. Build 3 models.. all PLUG-IN EREVs. A SUV, a 4-door Pickup, and since they’re rare, a new Sedan body style too. All with the same basic powertrain but offered in both efficient one-motor FWD and dual motor AWD variants. Make them 20-30% % smaller than the similar SCOUTs and at least 20 to 30% % less costly.

Go with smallish lower cost EV batteries and a purpose-built range extender/generator combination (I dream of an Omega-1 rotary engine under the hood an EREV).

I’d design and market the FWD variants to appeal to the cost-conscious buyers, and I’d design and market the AWD variants leaning into Mitsubishi’s RALLY legacy with more power and capability,

Continue the 10/100K warranty across the entire line + revamp the dealer network.

There. I fixed it. Where’s my multi-million dollar stock options?

Last edited 53 minutes ago by Zipn Zipn
Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
1 hour ago

Mitsubishi still makes the Montero Sport, a big RWD truck SUV, a segment which is still hot in the US. They fucked up by not selling it here anymore.

They got greedy with the Mirage, raising its price as the competition went poof! When they killed it, Mirage prices were almost double what they were just a few years before when the Spark and others were still around.

Here’s what Misubishi’s lineup should be:

Mitsubishi Kwid
Mitsubishi Twingo
Mitsubishi Logan
Mitsubishi Sandero
Mitsubishi Lancer (Megane), including the Evo (RS)
Mitsubishi Oroch
Mitsubishi Mighty Max (Triton/L200)
Mitsubishi Montero (Sport)
Mitsubishi Duster

Mitsubishi Delica
Mitsubishi Kangoo (could be sold as Nissan instead)
Mitsubishi Xpander
Mitsubishi Outlander
Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross (including the PHEV)

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
1 hour ago

In the US, the Mitsubishi brand is probably meaningless to most people, except the folks who Google “cheapest SUV”. In Las Vegas, a metropolitan area with a population of 2 million people, there is one Mitsubishi dealer, and the franchise is held by a dealer that used to be a BHPH lot. 90% of the Mitsubishis I see around town have rental car barcode stickers. I can’t imagine what Mitsubishi could do (within their financial means) to become relevant in the US again.

NC Miata NA
Member
NC Miata NA
1 hour ago

Like Toyota, Mitsubishi should bring back the Starion using the Z4 as the base. What could possibly go wrong selling a BMW and giving owners a 10 year warranty on it?

4jim
4jim
1 hour ago

I do not know about now but I want the MItzu of old, from cold vista wagons to 2dr Dakar Monteros.

Who Knows
Member
Who Knows
1 hour ago

electric small crossover next summer, followed by a rugged variant..”

Combine these two and produce a ruggedized small EV crossover, and see if they can take a bunch of market share from the Crosstrek and such.

Also make an EREV platform for a 4wd Delica and similarly interesting smallish truck, and maybe make the Tacoma largely obsolete.

Data
Data
1 hour ago

Doomed to a a life of mediocrity, Mitsubishi hasn’t realized how uncool and forgotten it is. Much like John Travolta after three “Look Who’s Talking” movies. What Mitsubishi needs is the automotive equivalent of Quentin Tarantino to come in and make Mitsubishi cool again. Unfortunately, I don’t see them ever being relevant again. That ship sailed 25 years ago.

Pupmeow
Member
Pupmeow
1 hour ago
Reply to  Data

25 years is about the average time span for old trends to regenerate. This could be Mistubishi’s moment!

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 hour ago

…I just literally left a comment on how the Mitsu hybrid crossover was so generic that when Nissan slapped their badge on it, I genuinely couldn’t tell it was actually a Mitsubishi. Yes, Mitsubishi needs to get weird. Will they? I dunno.

That said, if asked make a new lineup; distinctive styling! Headline-grabbing features! Federalize a Keitruck! A new Evo! Something attention-grabbing and/or weird! Anything!

Last edited 1 hour ago by James McHenry
Luxobarge
Member
Luxobarge
1 hour ago

Build a perfect Mitsubishi lineup for the United States. What are you doing?

Bringing back the best-known, most competitive Mitsubishi product of all time: the A6M Zero.

Fratzog
Fratzog
1 hour ago
Reply to  Luxobarge

In a legendary marketing blunder, the return of this nameplate was supposed to be announced during sunday night football 3 weeks from now.

Luxobarge
Member
Luxobarge
1 hour ago
Reply to  Fratzog

I LOL’ed for three straight minutes at this.

World24
World24
1 hour ago

The Mitsubishi Triton we don’t get is capable, rugged, and just a little different in the way the best Mitsubishis are. But enough about what Mitsubishi can do for Nissan

I mean, what Nissan could do is give Mitsubishi part 2 of the Raider for the US market. That’d be pretty sweet.
Outside of that though, maybe Mitsu can drop that bastard of an Outlander Sport (and we complain about CDJR offering vehicles far past their sell by date? That sucker is about to be 20 in a couple years!) and rebadge the Kicks in its place? The furthest shot possible would be a rebadge of the new Z too.
Do that, then maybe they can start getting enough money to really do Ralliart right and bring back an Evo.

GreatFallsGreen
Member
GreatFallsGreen
1 hour ago
Reply to  World24

The basic design is only a few years newer at this point, but if Nissan still plans to keep making the old Kicks as the “Play” for a bit longer that could be an option as an Outlander Sport replacement. If they want to keep the newer Kicks for themselves that is.

Or drop it in favor of a Sentra -> Lancer rebadge and let the Eclipse Cross just be the cheap SUV.

Last edited 1 hour ago by GreatFallsGreen
World24
World24
31 minutes ago

That too. They really need to just offer more.

AssMatt
Member
AssMatt
1 hour ago

I know they’re unrelated but I feel like that video happens in the same world as the Radiohead song. Claymation is rad.

Vanagan
Member
Vanagan
1 hour ago

Mitsubishi needs to lean into that “differentness” and also the PHEV push. It will not solve all their problems, but they need people to want their vehicles, and the PHEV Outlander definitely has helped them a lot. But they need to push that momentum. The van market is good, and a PHEV competitor to the Pacifica, while being weird as well, would definitely be a good space.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Member
Arch Duke Maxyenko
2 hours ago

Build a perfect Mitsubishi lineup for the United States. What are you doing?

Pulling out of the US market and never looking back

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