The M&P series of autoloading pistols work just fine, though. While they don't have Glock's track record, as they are relatively new, my personal experiences with them in both 9mm and 40 S&W were positive. I found them to be reliable, very accurate and the recoil was very manageable. They also feel much better in my hands than a Glock.
Today's S&W is not the same company that it was in the days when it signed the 2000 agreement with the Clinton administration.
From Wikipedia
A little more than a year later, S&W was broke and in May 2001, it was purchased for a song by the Saf-T-Hammer Company. Today, Smith and Wesson is one of the largest manufacturers of handguns in the US. The M&P series of autoloaders (handguns and rifles) has been quite a success for them. Their snubby revolvers are also very popular for concealed carry. They have also made inroads into the Law Enforcement markets. Not everyone holds the transgressions of its former owners against S&W anymore.In March 2000 Smith & Wesson signed an agreement with the Clinton Administration in order to avoid lawsuits. The company agreed to numerous safety and design standards, as well as limits on the sale and distribution of their products. Gun clubs and gun rights groups responded to this agreement by initiating large-scale boycotts of Smith & Wesson by refusing to buy their new products and flooding the firearms market with used S&W guns, cutting into their market share. This agreement signed by Tomkins PLC ended with the sale of Smith and Wesson to the Saf-T-Hammer Corporation. The new company, (Smith and Wesson Holding Corporation), publicly renounced the agreement which was received positively by the firearms community.