Thoughtful post, but let me offer a slightly different perspective while still agreeing with much you have written. To begin, I feel the only road forward for most manufacturers is a mix of powertrains in their portfolio including gas, hybrid and electric. The Stealth could be all you describe and more with this approach and the Jeep Cherokee could be it’s demure spin off. As much as I believe in mixed portfolios, the only future I see for Chrysler is being the North American Stellantis brand going fully electric. Where I most disagree with you is on the viabilty of a full size 300 sedan. If Chrysler is to survive it must fit between Alfa Romeo and Maserati as a near luxury all electric brand that differs significantly from the performance Dodge and Trail Rated Jeep brands.
If Chrysler is on the edge of extinction, why not roll the dice on luxury full range vehicles including an SUV, a mini-van, a sedan and dare I say it....a.coupe ?
Indeed, all electric is doomed industry wide to the forces of market choice, but if Stellantis, those woke sheep, are so fixated with electric, let Chrysler be their Tesla fighter in North America.
Your facts and logic are hard to deny, but I’m not ready to give up on Chrysler.
Look again at my proposal, seems like a path forward. There is money committed and the future has been polluted by all the players you mentioned, but I can’t stop thinking there is still life in the old girl and why not give it a shot.
Thank God for my Crossfire, at least I can soldier forward in something with a Chrysler badge untill the big man calls my number.
I definitely agree with the though of Chrysler taking on Tesla as the EV arm of Stellantis and may have mentioned it a time or two before on this site and the other sites I comment on. As I've mentioned before, with the four brands, Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge & Ram, Stellantis needs to have more definition and purpose between all four brands. At one point in time, the Chrysler 300M was one of my favorite cars. I agree that a sleek full electric version of the 300M Special would be an amazing Tesla Plaid/Lucid Air Sapphire competitor. The problem is, as I've mentioned, Chrysler's biggest issue currently is that the other brands in Stellantis' North American portfolio are way more luxurious than anything in the Chrysler lineup and it's three offerings are in dying segments. Even if Chrysler redid the 300M and made it a Tesla competitor, the BEV market is so fragile right now that a hard shift back to ICE and Hybrids could spell disaster for a new full electric entry into the market. Another big issue for Chrysler is at what price point do you sell a Chrysler at? Ideally, mostly everything from Dodge needs to be about $10,000 to nearly $20,000 less expensive than what it is right now. Dodge needs to shift back into being an everyday affordable brand including its low-to-mid range muscle cars, while bringing out an expanded portfolio on the STLA Medium platform of affordable cars, crossovers and a compact pickup truck that also offer muscle in the affordable segment while also offering its STLA Large muscle cars, SUVs and pickup truck in a more affordable price range. Jeep would also need to step out of the Luxury market with the Grand Cherokee, Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer and rethink it's lineup to give the Chrysler Brand the space to do what it needs to do to survive. Jeep honestly hurts both Chrysler and Dodge by being stretched into so many different markets and honestly, not really having a defined role in it's family. Let's look at it like this.
As it currently sits, the Grand Wagoneer/Wagoneer should be named the Chrysler Imperial as that vehicle is what a Chrysler should be. If you want to make it electric do what they did with the Ramcharger and have the 3.6L as a range extender and have it be a 600+hp EV along with having Hurricane and Hurricane Hybrid offerings with the hybrid ZF 8-speed system. Sitting under that, the Jeep Grand Cherokee should be renamed the Chrysler New Yorker. Keep the 375hp 2.0L Hybrid 4Xe powertrain. Right there we have two vehicles in the lineup and both vehicles offer an electrified or fully electric powertrain option on certain trim levels that actually makes sense. Moving down to the STLA Large platform, a Chrysler Airflow could actually utilize the 340kW, 440kW and the Banshee powertrains along with a 2.0L Hybrid powertrain, which offers another addition to the Chrysler lineup with full electric and hybrid technology and all of the Fratzonic exhaust systems and everything else the Charger Banshee was supposed to have. If Chrysler is to keep the Minivan, offer the 402hp dual motor setup and a 4-cylinder range extender and the 375hp 2.0L Hybrid option. I don't see Chrysler offering a sports coupe as it moves out of the direction of what Chrysler really is and starts to butt up against Dodge.
As for Jeep, the Wrangler/Wrangler Unlimited/Gladiator are really the only vehicles in the Jeep lineup that are really Jeep vehicles and are what the Jeep brand should be all about. One platform, three vehicles, one powertrain, the 375hp 2.0L 4Xe. Make the Wrangler unlimited the same size as the Gladiator so that it actually has cargo space while being able to seat 5-adults, and that should be Jeep.
Ram is pretty much fine right now except they need a street performance muscle pickup as well. Looking forward to the RHO (Rebel High Output) and hopefully an 809hp 3.0L Hurricane HO Hybrid TRX variant soon as well as a 550hp Ram 1500 Daytona and an 809hp Ram SRT Copperhead street performance pickup truck!
Last but not least is DODGE. I've already gone through all of the numbers and things of how Dodge can continue offering massive levels of horsepower and torque with the new Charger, Durango, and whatever else is going to be on the STLA Large platform with Hurricane engines and Hurricane Hybrid powertrains utilizing the new ZF hybrid 8-speed transmission all the way up to an 809hp variant using the 550hp 3.0L High Output engine and hybrid transmission. We all know that there is going to be a 1,000+ hp variant of the 3.0L Hurricane in a Race only variant, which means that Dodge could even detune that to 850hp and throw a hybrid ZF 8-speed behind that and still be over 1,000hp and be emissions compliant and offer electrified emission-less driving in the same vehicles. However, the Dodge brand also needs to look at the fact that there is an entire population out there that could benefit from more affordable offerings on the STLA: Medium platform with compact to midsize crossovers and 3 & 5 Door liftback style vehicles. Two amazing performance liftback vehicles that were icons of their day were the Fox Body Mustangs and third gen F-Body Camaros and firebirds and the F-Body cars offered a 320hp 5.7L V8 and a 6-speed manual transmission, which was a pretty hot car for its time. Let's just say for instance, made a car with two doors, a liftback design, gave it about 375hp and about 405lb-ft of torque with a transverse mounted turbo-4 and 9-speed ZF transaxle up front with an electric rear motor/axle setup, gave it the ZF AKC (rear steering), a few performance goodies and a body shape that was more like a 1971 Dodge Dart Demon and called it the Dodge Dart SRT Demon, which pays a bit more homage to the Demon 340 of the '70's with a throwback to the SRT4 cars by giving it that raw feeling that the SRT4 had (minus of course a manual transmission). Offer a bunch of Direct connection upgrades and you have a economy muscle car for the masses just like the Demon 340 was back in the day. This car would also be more directly competitive with the Ford Mustang GT as well. Now before people start looking at the numbers difference lets remember something, Kia's EV6 GT beats the Challenger Black Ghost with alot less HP. Kia's stinger GT with 365hp in a twin turbo V6 can also outpace the previous gen mustang GT 5.0, which makes more horsepower with a 5.0L V8 so Don't count it out. Let's also say that same vehicle came with the Hornet's two powertrains below that as the GT and R/T versions, which really gives Dodge a proper American hot hatch that would truly be unlike any other hot hatch out there. Have that, the Hornet and the Rampage on the STLA Medium platform with the Charger, the Durango and the Dakota on the STLA Large platform with the 375hp 2.0L 4Xe hybrid as the base engine and go up to the Hurricane and Hurricane Hybrid variants and Stellantis, North America would be great! That is 6 Dodge models, three jeep models, Three or Ram models (1500, 2500, 3500) and four Chrysler models. Not only does that give every single brand its own space, it also goes along with the plan to offer some sort of electrification in over 50% of Stellantis' entire portfolio, reduces emissions, still offers segment leading horsepower, torque and performance numbers, still offers modern-nostalgia in a respectful and tasteful way, still allows for enthusiasts to have cars they can tinker with and modify with Direct Connection factory backed parts (and of course aftermarket unless Direct Connection really steps their game up), and takes "EUROTHINK" and gives it a distinctly defiant American twist! While it's a stretch, it would be also really awesome to see a new Viper sports car with the 800+ HP Nettuno 3.0L Twin Turbo V6 Hybrid powertrain with an AWD setup and more affordable pricing to go toe-to-toe with the Corvette. Stellantis, North America could be a serious force in the Auto industry even without a single V8, which is why I say the brand has unlimited potential with what they have at their disposal.