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09/19/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 09/19/2024 14:05

Did GM President Mark Reuss Confirm the Corvette Will Always Be a Chevy

As long as there has been a Corvette, Chevrolet has tinkered with its very Corvette-ness. Recall the gorgeous 1953 Nomad wagon and fastback '54 Corvette Corvair, the various CERV and Mako Shark concepts of the early '60s, and the many mid-engine (and rotary!) ideas that were part of the Corvette story throughout C2, C3, and C4 development. The C8, obviously, and to a greater extent the C8 E-Ray, is the biggest variation on the Corvette theme in the car's long history, and while rumors of an SUV have circulated over the last several years, they have remained, thankfully, rumors.

(L to R) CERV I, CERV III, CERV IIGM

The one thing that has always bound these disparate Corvette ideas, however, has been their maker. From the very start, the Corvette has been recognizable by its own badge, the crossed flags, with the faintest hint of bow tie adorning one of them. The car doesn't need a Silverado-sized badge, because everyone knows what it is, and everyone knows that Chevy builds it.

Despite long-running speculation, on this site and elsewhere, that Chevy might cleave Corvette into its own brand, GM president Mark Reuss recently appeared to dispel that speculation. During his recent visit to Jay Leno's Garage, where Reuss unveiled the next Corvette ZR1 and the pair discussed the legacy of America's sports car, Leno says the Corvette "really has become its own separate brand now."

Jay Leno and Mark Reuss discuss the Corvette brand.YouTube/Jay Leno's Garage

"It really is," Reuss agrees but then adds this important caveat: "We'd never, I don't think, you know, take it out of Chevrolet, because the core of Chevrolet is offering people more than they thought for the money and doing it with fantastic design and performance, and that's what Corvette is." He's not wrong, of course.

"I like that you don't change the name," Leno replies.

"We don't need to go out and do other things," says Reuss, appearing to put the matter to bed.

Now, does that mean we won't someday see a Corvette SUV, or another front-engined Corvette, or a fission-powered Corvette? Nope. Because Chevy keeps on tinkering with the thing-as we should all hope and expect it to. But for now, at least, the Corvette is a Chevrolet, and it's keeping its bow tie.

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