The Morning Dump is, ostensibly, an industry news roundup. Unlike some other industry digests, this one is written with a clear enthusiast’s bent. I may have a logical understanding of why a business decision is made but, as a gearhead, I also reserve the right to critique it for not fitting within my specific worldview. Maserati is the rare exception where the company and I are on the same side emotionally, united in the face of reason.
I want to talk about what the Stellantis CEO told Italian legislators about the company, what’s maybe going to happen next, and why it sounds fun to me even if I can’t entirely make sense of it. At the same time, Stellantis is also allegedly trying to elevate Ram over Jeep, which is strange! Volkswagen is another company that seems incapable of presenting a logical mix of brands, and that leaves that company’s CEO facing heat from inside and outside.
Building cars is hard, as is running the union that represents the people who build the cars. Will UAW President Fain’s administration come tumbling down, or will his success at the bargaining table help union members overlook the toxic environment that seems to persist within UAW leadership? You know it’s a rough week when talking about Maserati is the easy thing to do.
Maserati Is In Talks With ‘Two Important Partners’

There were a bunch of newly revised Maseratis revealed today, and I thank Thomas for getting into the minutia of what all changed in a way that I wasn’t emotionally prepared to do this morning. I like Maserati as a brand. I like that it exists. I want it to continue to exist in a way that I want all car brands to continue exist, just more so because of its incredible history. A world without Maserati is a worse place for us, even if it’s maybe holistically better for Stellantis.
The brand is in a tough position. It basically exists to sell a mix of hand-me-down platforms (the Grecale is related to both the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Alfa Giulia) and one low volume sports car (MCPura) that people theoretically buy. When Maserati got its motors handed down from Ferrari you could sort of see it as the sedan/SUV partner to that brand. With Ferrari being excised from the rest of the company like Beyoncé from Destiny’s Child, Maserati had a larger role to fill and fewer resources to do it with.
I’ve written before that I thought the current iteration of the brand is kinda sad, and Thomas made the point well that bringing in McKinsey to try to fix it isn’t likely to help, and he nailed it with this line:
[I]nstead of getting Ferrari DNA for nearly Mercedes-Benz money, you’re getting Alfa Romeo DNA for Porsche money. No wonder global sales aren’t living up to expectations.
It doesn’t seem like the new faces are going to help this, and there’s been rumor after rumor of the company being sold. That doesn’t seem to be happening, as Bloomberg reports:
“We are in talks with two important partners that can bring technologies and a series of excellent ideas, we’re deciding with which one to work in the future,” Filosa told Italian lawmakers at a parliamentary hearing in Rome Wednesday, in response to several questions on the future of Maserati and of the Cassino site that assembles both Maserati and Alfa Romeo cars. He didn’t identify the potential partners.
[…]
Filosa said there’s no plan to sell Maserati or the under-used Cassino plant near Rome. He said Cassino’s future will be “closely tied” to that of Maserati and, the brand will remain “an icon of Italian style.”
The new Maserati plan, to be presented in December, is “ambitious” and will include two new key models, Filosa said.
So, Maserati is not “for sale.” Why not? I can think of a few reasons. Maybe no one wants the brand badly enough to pay for it. Maybe no one wants to be the CEO that loses Maserati. Or maybe, given the fact that the last Stellantis CEO (not pictured) made the Italian government mad at the company all the time, it’s not worth getting into another series of fights when there are bigger fish to fry.
What will this partnership be? No one knows, though Stellantis has already partnered with Dongfeng and Leapmotor, so a joint venture with a new or existing Chinese partner makes sense. Who else really has the capital to bring on more brands?
The MCPura is fun to drive, and there are not enough fun-to-drive sports cars out there. While I’m concerned that we’ll mostly get warmed up crossovers, Maserati has the capability to surprise everyone and the brand name to back up the effort. For that reason alone I’ll continue to want Maserati to get a chance.
Is Ram Being Put Ahead Of Jeep?

Jeep always feels like the most important brand for Stellantis — the one name that stands above the rest. I just bought my daughter a Jeep trunk for camp, which she was excited about. Would she be as excited about a Dodge trunk? Probably not. Jeep has also been a profit center, historically, for whatever parent company. Going forward though, maybe it’ll be Ram?
That’s the plan, at least, according to Automotive News:
In a major landscape shift for Stellantis, the automaker projects that the truck brand carved out of Dodge in 2009 will surpass Jeep as its North American volume leader by the end of the decade. It’s targeting 2030 sales of 825,000 for Ram — 60 percent more than last year — versus 740,000 for Jeep.
Stellantis plans to more than double the size of Ram’s lineup over that period, expanding into several new segments after U.S. sales fell to a 12-year low in 2025.
Ram finally intends to punch back against Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota with compact and midsize pickups, and the brand will establish itself in the full-size SUV space with the beefy Ramcharger. It’s also working to single-handedly revive the small van segment with the Promaster City and catering to street truck enthusiasts with the muscular Rumble Bee lineup.
It makes a sort of sense, especially with the shifting regulatory landscape in the United States. While Jeep can play in some spaces we’re unlikely to see Ram (compact crossovers), Ram has a ton of opportunities with vans, larger SUVs, and especially compact and midsize pickups that wouldn’t apply to Jeep.
Volkswagen Drama Is Going To Get Worse Before It Gets Better

Very tall Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume is not yet tall enough to rise above the concerns of shareholders, employees, or the old families that still rule the company. The combination of a shaky EV strategy, tariffs, and China mean that a bold strategy is needed. Blume says he has one, but he’s also got to sell it to a skeptical audience.
Volkswagen AG Chief Executive Officer Oliver Blume is coming under mounting pressure from shareholders to show his overhaul is moving fast enough, as BMW AG’s deep outlook cut adds to concerns over prospects for Germany’s auto industry.
At VW’s annual meeting Thursday, investors are asking if efforts over the past three years of Blume’s tenure are enough as China’s electric-vehicle champions reorder the industry. At stake is Europe’s biggest carmaker’s ability to finance its future and keep paying the dividends that help sustain its investor appeal.
“Without a decisive restructuring, Volkswagen risks a gradual decline,” said Tanja Bauer, a sustainability and corporate-governance specialist at Deka Investment, one of Germany’s largest fund companies. Shareholders need “a business model that reliably produces returns again.”
It’s not just the regular shareholders who have a concern, the OG Porsche and Piëch families are also interested as Manager Magazin explains in a thorough and typically cutting piece:
Alarmed by the danger, the Porsches and Piëchs are intervening more than is customary within the company. Blocking progress here, pushing frantically there – for a corporation fighting for survival, both are equally dangerous. A family master plan? Not apparent. Instead, mistrust reigns.
I can not attest to the accuracy of this report, though I can attest to it being quite the yarn. I usually don’t like to republish someone’s kicker, but the whole piece is so long and enjoyable that I think I can do it here and barely scratch the surface of all the reporting in the piece:
Patriarch Ferdinand K. Piëch once said – alluding to Thomas Mann’s “Buddenbrooks” – what he expected: “The first generation builds, the second maintains, my generation is the third. And it will ruin.”
His widow , Ursula Piëch (70), and her son, Gregor (32), no longer need to worry about this. They’ve already inherited. In 2017, the elder Piëch sold his shares to his brother, Hans Michel, for a reported 900 million euros. Their stance on the current situation is sometimes expressed more subtly. When Gregor recently invited his mother on a birthday drive through Tuscany, they didn’t go in a Porsche 911 or a luxury car from Ferdinand’s favorite brand, Bugatti. They took a Ferrari, more precisely: their GTC4 Lusso.
Yikes!
Get Ready For A UAW Election

It’s hard to comprehensively judge UAW President Shawn Fain’s leadership without being a little disappointed. If you’re a person who ascribes to the “they don’t ask, they ask how many” philosophy, then Fain’s rough-and-tumble tactics are justified by his success in getting historic contracts and finally securing a UAW deal in Tennessee. On the other hand, that caustic approach has been turned inward on his own union, drawing serious and credible complaints from a court-appointed overseer who has accused Fain of being an abrasive, loud-mouthed bully.
Given that the court-appointed overseer role exists because previous UAW leadership became toxic enough to see many involved go to jail, the ends may not justify the means for many of the UAW members voting to elect new leadership. According to the Detroit Free Press, here’s who is up against Fain:
Tricia Geiger
Rich Boyer (currently a vice president)
Greg Mooney
Brian Keller
Will Lehman
If I’d put my money on anyone, it might be Rich Boyer.
What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD
Fun fact about me: Whenever “Miss You” by The Rolling Stones comes on I have to listen to the whole thing.
The Big Question
What’s your favorite non-Ferrari Italian car?
Top photo: Maserati









Abarth 695 Biposto… take the already stupid Abarth 695 and turn it up to 11 with a carbon doorcards, no rear seats, plenty of scaffolding and a shifter that would suit most hypercars *angry little scorpion exhaust noises*
oh… and the Lancia Stratos HF Zero… because it’s also stupid… but also gorgeous… and stupid.
Lamborghini Countach
The big question: Autobianchi A112. It’s so CUTE.
TBQ: I’m not huge on Italian cars outside of Ferrari, but I am a sucker for the Fiat 500 and the Alfa GTV6.
TBQ: Can’t pick just one, but I’d start with the Maserati Ghibli (the ’60s Giugiaro/Ghia coupe, not the recent sedan aberration), Lamborghini Miura P400, Alfa Romeo 1750/2000 Giulia GTV coupe, and the Lancia Fulvia coupe. And maybe toss in the Iso Grifo, too (another Giugiaro design).
On the other hand, I could envision a 1-car garage filled with an Iso Isetta, a Vespa 400, and a Fiat 500, just to give the mini/micro cars their due.
TBQ
The most important probably the Lamborghini Miura is my 2 cents.
My favorite is the Lamborghini Countach because junior high me had the poster on the wall with several girls in skimpy bikinis in and on the car.
What’s your favorite non-Ferrari Italian car?
Lancia Stratos
I’m with you on the Stratos but its unobtanium. My favorite that is a possibility to own is a Lancia Fluvia.
TBQ: Vespa Ape.
Move existing Chrysler product portfolio to Dodge, Jeep or Ram and replace with Alfa and Maserati, certify and bring in as many of the EU brands as can be certified. Place them all under the Chrysler nameplate; Alfa by Chrysler ,,, Trucks and jeeps IDGAF about so I don’t care what they do with them. Course I’m in a minority on the truck thing.
I love everything in the Stones catalog. Miss You was The Rolling Stones chameleon morphing again. I’m also fond of 54-40’s not a cover “Miss You”.
That’s about right. Maserati was supposed to be FCA/Stellantis’ premium-plus brand: in the same tier as Porsche or the Range Rover sub-brand. It’s supposed to be a cut above Audi or BMW or Volvo. It ought to be a cash cow for Stellantis, since people clearly have no shortage of money to spend on luxury vehicles.
In reality, it has less brand equity and overall desirability than any of those brands.
TBQ: Pretty sure we can all agree that the best and most important Italian car is the Fiat 124
Most important? Between the Autobianchi Primula and the Fiat 128.
Why is Maserati (still)? Because Joe Walsh name-dropped it in the late 1970s in “Life’s Been Good”? After all, eternal classic rock repetition seared it into many brains…
TBQ? Moto Guzzi (okay, it’s a bike). Lancia Fulvia coupe.
TBQ: Does Ducati count?
Edit: Today I’d rather have a Moto Guzzi!
TBQ: Fiat X One Ninth
I can’t help but read MCPura as McPura. They might want to rethink that name, unless Maserati’s long-term strategy includes a dollar menu.
TBQ:
Huracan. Close second is the Gallardo. I prefer those to any Ferrari models, so the “non-Ferrari” qualifier doesn’t change my response.
I read it as Mcpurra and all I could think of was cats purring!
My Favorite Italian car is the Fiat Panda!
James May reveals himself!!
“Stellantis plans to more than double the size of Ram’s lineup over that period, expanding into several new segments after U.S. sales fell to a 12-year low in 2025.”
You know one good way for the brand to expand into new segments? Put it back under Dodge and make Dodge a CAR AND TRUCK brand and make Dodge go head-to-head against Toyota, Chevy, Ford and other major brands…. like it used to.
But this report from the MBA consulting firm sez…
And, if they still refuse to do that for some reason, come up with an actual new model name to gather all the full-size pickups under, instead of just 1500, 2500, 3500. Call the the RAM R-Series or whatever, just something
So the overseer correctly has identified that Fain is in fact a UAW president. In theory I want to support a union like the UAW, but the execution by its leadership (from an outside observer) makes them one of the hardest to root for organizations.
Corporate culture is real. People change but the culture doesn’t despite good intentions. The road to Hell is paved with good intentions. I see it in my town.
Seems a recurring theme in the administrative domain.
The opposite of the “abrasive, loud-mouthed bully” is the quiet and polite corporate shill who does the company’s bidding against the people he’s supposed to represent.
You know, what UAW had before Fain.
Probably the public facing side has changed, but internals haven’t
How about the Fiat 124. Not the Mazda flavored Fiat 124, nor the other Fiat 124…but the Fiat 124 sedan because it was the starting point for AutoVAZ and I think that’s neat.
I have a 1980 Fiat 124 Spider. I think it looks great, but mine needs enough work I can really only speculate on how good it can be.
It was also the first home (in Coupé guise) of the legendary Fiat Twin Cam engine.
I have a soft spot for the Fiat 128, one belonging to a friend of my dad was the first “foreign” car I ever rode in. 2-door sedan, white with tan interior.
A game changer. The first car to really mass market the transverse-engine-with-gearbox-next-to-it which is now ubiquitous.
There had better be more than just expansion in that plan, because if they think the solution to shrinking sales from uncompetitive, overpriced product is more uncompetitive, overpriced product, they’re in for a rude awakening.
I also can’t help wondering if some of the shift to Ram is caused by the epic failure of the Wagoneer on the Jeep side. They screwed up so badly that they managed to wreck the brand image of one of the most bulletproof brands in the world (after all, “It’s a Jeep thing, you wouldn’t understand” is their unofficial motto). Here’s hoping they don’t flush the Ramcharger name down the toilet too.
Based on the reporting from yesterday. Stellantis is either digging a newer deeper hole or is run by visionaries. Discuss amongst yourselves.
I had an Alfa Romeo Giulia Ti Sport as a daily driver for a bit and it will forever have a place in my heart. Sure, the passenger door was reluctant to latch when the temperature dropped below freezing. Maybe the infotainment screen would occasionally reboot when I put the car in reverse. But damn was it pretty, and it drove the way it looked.
All the old guard european automotive manufacturers will eventually be owned by the chinese, just like MG etc… The chinese already own 9.98% of Damiler AG. Sure they will fight it, resist the best they can. However nobody can complete with the chinese slave labor and currency manipulation to keep wages suppressed.
FIAT X1/9
I’m going with Pagani. Horatio Pagani seems like exactly the right kind of eccentric rich asshole.
I’ve heard that he’s fluent in english, but generally refuses to speak it on principle alone.
That, honestly, makes his vehicles even more appealing if that rumor is true.
He sells art that just so happens to be road legal. I love them because there’s no purpose to their existence other than to exist and be seen.
Even as one of our prominent advocates of sending the 1% on a one way mission to Pluto I really can’t fault Pagani all that much. Like, yeah it would be rad if you did something to improve the material conditions of regular people…but out of all the things you could be using your vast resources on building incredible boutique cars simply out of love for the game is pretty hard to fault.
I have pretty severe hypercar fatigue, but when Horacio unveils one of his creations every decade or so I pay attention. He very clearly gets it in a way that the vast majority of his peers do not.
As Wrench notes above, it’s really rolling art. The Huayra’s manual shift gate is worthy of many drools.
My god, just look at it
That’s “just” the automatic shifter, the manual is much prettier
yessssss
Agreed. I’d say he’s as passionate as Christian Von Koenigsegg, but instead of engineering, he just wants to make rolling art.
Like, the man obsesses over individual bespoke bolts that fit his aesthetic vision.
Until he makes a car that a tall wide human can comfortably fit in and drive he will forever remain a wanker IMO.
The exposed carbon Zondas are absolutely perfect.