NEWS ROUNDUP
Inslee closes gap, Iron Workers make a difference, bring jobs home…
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
ELECTION
► In today’s Seattle Times — Reagan Dunn missed most votes at county-council meetings — Of a total 3,805 full-council votes during his tenure, the Republican candidate for Secretary of State State Attorney General missed 491, more than any other council member.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Olympian — Tobacco industry sues over tax charge — The roll-your-own tobacco industry filed a lawsuit last week against a measure that would tax its product like retail cigarettes. The group filing the lawsuit argues that the legislation raises taxes and therefore should have required a two-thirds vote to pass the Legislature. It passed 27-19 in the Senate.
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Battle escalates over garbage contract — A war of words over how long to extend Snohomish County’s $20-million-per-year solid-waste contract has grown increasingly strident. The County Council and County Executive Aaron Reardon have been at odds over whether to extend the contract by two or four years.
► In today’s News Tribune — Fife casino closes doors, 100 people out of jobs— At the peak, some six years ago, the state could count 96 cardrooms. Today, with the demise of Freddie’s Club, an estimated 60 remain.
WHY CONGRESS IS SO UNPOPULAR
► From Bloomberg — Fiscal-cliff concerns hurting economy as companies hold back — Companies are starting to delay hiring and spending out of concern that Congress won’t reach a compromise in time to avoid automatic tax increases and budget cuts that would pull billions of dollars of purchasing power out of the economy. Faced with a so-called fiscal cliff of more than $600 billion in higher taxes and reductions in defense and other government programs in 2013, U.S. companies are pulling back, though the deadline for congressional action is more than six months away.
► In The Hill — Senate Dems balk at ending Bush-era tax rates on wealthy without deficit deal — A growing number of Senate Democrats (at least 7) are signaling they are not prepared to raise taxes on anyone unless Congress approves a grand bargain to reduce the deficit, breaking with party leaders who have called for letting the Bush-era tax rates expire for people earning more than $1 million per year. That gives Senate Republicans a chance to push a temporary extension similar to the deal struck in December 2010.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Is it any wonder that just one in six Americans support the job Congress is doing?
NATIONAL
► At TPM — Poll shows large majority of Americans, independents support Obama’s immigration policy — In the nationwide survey, 64% of likely voters agree with president’s decision, while 30% disagree. Sixty-six percent of independents — a crucial portion of the electorate that will likely decide the presidential race — support the policy. Although Obama insisted that he bypassed Congress to advance the policy because it was “the right thing to do,” it is hard to ignore the political shrewdness of the move.
► In today’s NY Times — Teachers’ union to open lesson-sharing website — The American Federation of Teachers is forming a partnership to create a Web site where teachers can share curriculum materials with one another. “We are taking the trust that people have about us and transforming it to trust about the site itself,” said AFT President Randi Weingarten.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Mexico entering Trans-Pacific trade agreement — The U.S. Trade Representative announced that Mexico will be invited to join the TPP negotiations. Although the United States already has extensive trade relations with Mexico through the NAFTA, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says, Mexico’s inclusion in the TPP could have significant impacts on workers in both countries.
► In today’s NY Times — When ALEC takes over your town (by Joe Nocera) — Shrinking government sounds appealing. We all have our favorite examples of silly regulations and bloated bureaucracies. But struggling municipalities don’t have a lot of fat; cutting means reducing or eliminating programs that citizens depend on. And, in any case, in a democracy, the decision of what — and whether — to cut should rest with elected officials who are responsible to voters, not to an unelected receiver using bankruptcy law to unilaterally make cuts. That may be the ALEC solution, but it shouldn’t be ours.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► This infographic says it all: Greedy corporations sitting on trillions in cash, while U.S. jobs are being shipped overseas. TAKE A STAND! Text JOBS to 235246 to get info and action alerts to help bring America’s jobs home.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m. These links are functional at the date of posting, but sometimes expire.