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Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, red dress, marches with auto workers and dignitaries behind a Chevy Volt electric vehicle during the introduction of General Motors' vehicles during the press preview for the Detroit International Auto Show at the Cobo Center January 11, 2009 in Detroit, MichiganBill Pugliano

He stands all day, bent over noisy machines, cutting giant sheets of steel and feeding them into monster-sized presses so powerful the concrete floor rumbles beneath his size-16 feet.

This is how Steve Prucnell builds cars. In 22 years, the parts haven't changed much. A car's a car.

But then another project came along, something totally different.

After decades of building everything from Corvettes to Saturns to Silverados,- Mr. Prucnell took a giant leap into the future, working on early models of the Chevy Volt, General Motors' new electric car. It's a high-risk, high-profile venture and Mr. Prucnell is understandably nervous.

Maybe it's the 13 foreclosure signs that popped up on his street. Or turning 50 in a struggling industry. O Mr. r working for a company that needed a $52-billion loan from the U.S. Treasury to stay alive. Whatever the reason, Prucnell is keeping his fingers crossed, hoping America is ready for a new kind of love affair - battery included.

The Volt could help usher in a new generation of electric cars, but there's more at stake here than a technological breakthrough: The fate of GM and its workers. The future of a beleaguered state. And, maybe, in some larger sense, the image of all U.S. auto workers, eager to prove they have what it takes to compete on the global stage.

The moment of truth is coming, and Mr. Prucnell feels the pressure.

"If this doesn't fly, what's left for GM?" he asks, taking a break from work at the GM Tech Center. "Wall Street is going to say, 'We knew they couldn't dig themselves out of the hole."'

There was, Mr. Prucnell says, a different vibe building the Volt's test models. It wasn't just the intense scrutiny from above. It was the anxiety down below, on the shop floor.

"I don't want to say that we worked harder on this," Mr. Prucnell says. "I think we worked a lot smarter. I mean everybody was on their 'A' game ... It was, 'We want to make sure we're perfect."'

"We know the Volt is the last hurrah for GM," he adds. "It's either do or die."

Roam the state of Michigan, and you will hear the same insistent optimism:

The Volt is crucial. So much depends on this car. It cannot fail.

This is a state that talks about becoming more than an auto capital, but cars have been its identity. It's the place where Henry Ford's name graces a college and hospital; where Pontiac was an Indian warrior and then a town before gaining fame as a car.

So when the car industry tanks, the crisis is financial, personal and even existential.

"Detroit," declares Mike Smith, head of the Reuther Library, "has two choices: Remake itself. Or die on the vine. We have to reinvent ourselves."

So what can a single car - one touted as revolutionary but still untested by the public - mean in a state that has hemorrhaged jobs, leaving some cities with Hoover-like jobless rates edging toward 30 per cent?

Maybe a lot, according to Mr. Smith.

"If you're going to have an electric car and if the Volt turns out to be the leader of the pack, think what that means in sales, prestige, in reputation," he says. "This one is symbolic in the sense that it's going to speak to the prowess of the American auto industry - and GM itself."

And the spotlight will be white-hot.

"The Volt," he says, "is going to be the most watched production in the history of autos."

Teri Quigley, the 22-year GM veteran who manages the sprawling Detroit-Hamtramck plant where the Volt will roll off the line, can already feel the heat.

"We have to execute flawlessly," she says. "A lot of pressure? Yeah ... We've got one chance to do this right. My work force has heard me say this more than once: The world is really going to be watching."

GM is spending $336-million (U.S.) to prepare the factory, so it can build Volts on the same line as the Cadillac DTS and Buick Lucerne.

The Volt, she says, could help restore luster to American cars - and the city.

"The whole view of what Detroit is like, what the auto industry is like - we have a unique opportunity to change that tarnished image," she says. "I'd like to change people's minds about what we do here."

Initially, the Volt will be available only in Michigan, California and Washington, D.C. GM won't reveal the price tag, though it's believed to be about $35,000 - not taking into account a $7,500 tax credit.

The car will have a 400-pound T-shaped lithium ion battery that gives it a range of up to 40 miles on one charge. After that, a small gas-powered engine will kick in to generate electricity to power the car about 300 miles. The battery can be recharged by plugging it into an electrical outlet.

GM is pouring $700-million into eight operations that will produce the car. The dollars and work will be spread out: Warren. Hamtramck. Bay City. Grand Blanc. Brownstown Township. And Detroit and Flint, two cities that are the walking wounded of the cataclysm that has engulfed Michigan.

The state has lost 860,000 jobs in a decade, the majority since 2007.

There have been some modest signs of improvement for U.S. auto makers; GM recently announced its first quarterly profit in nearly three years.

Even so, the auto industry will never again generate one in six U.S. jobs, says Mr. Smith, the historian. Robots, automation and foreign competition have changed that.

And yet ... silver linings can be found in small clouds.

"People in this area are looking for anything to say Michigan and the car industry can make it," he says. "That's the hope factor that drives a lot of us in Detroit. What if there are suddenly orders for 100,000 Volts? Now we're talking."

Dayne Walling is accustomed to looking for silver linings; he's mayor of Flint.

These days, he has 230 million reasons to be optimistic - the amount GM is investing in Volt projects in Flint. Most will go to renovate a plant where about 200 workers will build a 1.4-liter engine for the Volt and Chevy Cruze compact.

A few hundred jobs, though, won't reverse the devastation in a city where more than one in four people are unemployed, thousands of homes stand shuttered and once vibrant factories are empty concrete shells.

Still, Mr. Walling, is looking for a meaningful way to remain positive.

"You can bemoan the glass that's half-empty or you can embrace the glass that's half-full," says the boyish-looking, 36-year-old mayor. "We're part of next generation of GM - and that demonstrates we're part of its future, not its past."

The past did have moments of glory. In the 1950s and '60s, Flint bustled with 80,000 workers streaming into GM factories, creating traffic jams, backing up expressway exits.

A generation later, there were the massive layoffs depicted in Flint native Michael Moore's scathing documentary "Roger and Me," that took aim at Roger Smith, then GM's CEO.

For the record, Mr. Walling admits he liked "Roger and Me" - an attitude he says isn't widely shared in Flint.

"It was really funny and tragic," he says. "I took it as a challenge ... to work against the odds and not just promote a better image but make this a more prosperous community."

Twenty years later, the job is even harder.

But here comes the Volt.

"It's the beginning," Mr. Walling says, "of a long transition from a Rust Belt city to one that's more green, has more technology and is more relevant to the 21st century."

Kris Johns, an auto plant electrician, is making that transition himself.

He started as a young man at Flint. Now, 34 years later, he's part of the Volt engine launch team.

"It's saviour for us," he says, simply.

At 55, Mr. Johns could retire with a full pension, but he still wants to work.

GM has provided him a good life. He bought his first house, for instance, at 23. He built a 4,100-square-foot home, helped his three kids through college, bought a truck, an 18-foot boat and a 28-foot camper trailer.

"Working around here you were the rich guys," Mr. Johns says. "We were well-paid, for blue-collar workers. We will not deny that. But we worked hard, too. We gave them their money's worth."

Mr. Johns knows auto workers and GM have been bad-mouthed over the years; some of it, he feels has been unfair, but some justified.

"We've taken a pretty good beating. We developed a reputation for poor quality. We put out junk," he says, referring to some cars in the late '70s and early '80s. "People recognized it. It's taken awhile to get the public back."

An hour's drive away, Steve Prucnell agrees.

"I think their thinking was, 'Hey, we're No. 1. We're never going to be knocked off," he says, referring to the '80s. "Toyota kicked our butt."

Mr. Prucnell stops to make a point. "That's just Steve's opinion," he says.

The result wasn't pretty. When Mr. Prucnell started worked on the Volt last year, GM was in bankruptcy protection. A federal rescue was in question. And money was so tight, he says, workers scrimped on paper towels and wore their industrial gloves until they were tattered.

"Even I had my doubts GM would have been here in 2010 - and I'm a positive person ... I thought, 'What am I going to do?"' Mr. Prucnell recalls. "Is a 50-year-old guy marketable? Not really."

Mr. Prucnell has moved on to a new project. Some days, he sees Volts cruising around the tech center lot.

"There's going to be a feeling of pride when it's running off the line," he says. "We know it's going to be right."

George McGregor, president of UAW Local 22 in Detroit, is more measured in his optimism.

The Volt, he says, will put his workers on the ground floor of a new enterprise and hopefully provide job security.

"Do I want it to work? Most definitely. Most definitely. Now, do I have some reservations about battery cars? Definitely." Mr. McGregor lets loose a throaty laugh. "Definitely."

Mr. McGregor came to Detroit from Memphis in the late 1960s, fresh out of Vietnam. It was an era when a sturdy back and a willingness to work were enough to land an auto job - and a ticket to the middle class.

Now, 42 years later, Mr. McGregor, a 64-year-old grandfather with a halo of Brillo-like silver hair, presides over a dwindling auto empire. His local has shrunk from 6,000 members in the 1980s to 1,500 today.

So the Volt is mighty welcome. "We're blessed to have it," Mr. McGregor says in his raspy voice.

But he knows old habits die hard.

"Americans love power," he says. "Fast cars. You understand? They love large cars. Small cars, efficient cars? We're being forced into that now. If ... gas was reasonable, it would be SUVs and large cars."

Mr. McGregor figures electric cars are part of the future. Still, one question gnaws at him.

"Is this what the public really wants?" he asks, as if seeking reassurance.

"Hopefully," he says softly. "Hopefully."

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