NEWS ROUNDUP
Waste Management sabotage, ‘Mitt the Twit,’ the Prefab Four…
Friday, July 27, 2012
WASTE MANAGEMENT STRIKE
► In today’s Seattle Times — Teamsters, Waste Management tussle over picket lines — As garbage sat uncollected for a second day, Waste Management and its recycling and yard-waste drivers argued in competing news releases Thursday about whether picket lines would need to come down before labor negotiations could resume.
ALSO at The Stand — How to support Waste Management strikers
LOCAL
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Farmworkers’ suit alleges unfair firing — At least 10 farm workers from the Lower Valley are alleging their former employer fired them for complaining that a foreman brandished and fired a handgun to intimidate workers.
► In today’s Wenatchee World — Mayor says union rejects last-minute effort to save city jobs— A last-ditch effort to save two city employees from layoffs next week failed Thursday when an employees’ union voted against changes in their current health care benefits.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Border booze business gets boost — The two Post Falls liquor stores saw a 58% sales increase in June compared with June 2011, reports the Idaho State Liquor Division. The eight liquor stores just across the border, from Lewiston to Oldtown, are up 33% overall.
ALSO at The Stand — Liquor privatization’s false promises already exposed
ELECTION
► In today’s Seattle Times — Inslee, McKenna set two more gubernatorial debates — They’ll meet in Vancouver on Aug. 29 in a debate hosted by local civic, business and government groups. And they’ll debate in Yakima on Oct. 2 in an event sponsored by the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and KCTS-TV.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Linda Lanham is the AFA, and the AFA is Linda Lanham. Its office is her home and she is its sole employee. She is funded primarily (if not exclusively) by Boeing. Her job is to lobby for the state’s aerospace companies during the session, and in the interim, to host breakfasts and lunches featuring speakers who advocate for aerospace interests.
WALMART
► At Salon.com — Walmart punishes its workers — As Wal-Mart celebrates its 50th anniversary this summer, it has faced a new wave of resistance from its “associates” — the company’s corporate-speak for employees. Last month, a delegation of Wal-Mart workers brought their grievances to the company’s shareholder meeting, including low wages and understaffing. In interviews yesterday, three workers at the forefront of the campaign told Salon the company has punished them for their activism. Critics say that the world’s largest private sector employer is playing dirty once again.
— Walmart’s threat to our food, freedom and democracy (Part 1 of 3)
— Modern-day shackles in Walmart’s global supply chain (Part 2 of 3)
NATIONAL
► At Politico — Congress nears year-end funding deal — There’s already movement to avoid the fiscal cliff. House and Senate leadership Thursday approached a deal to fund the government for six months — a move that would avert a Sept. 30 shutdown, and keep the federal government operating through March.
► In The Hill — Boehner: House to vote next week on Senate Democratic tax bill — House Democrats will have a chance next week to vote on the Senate-passed middle-class tax bill, Speaker John Boehner says.
► At AFL-CIO Now — AFL-CIO: Pass the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2012 — The federal minimum wage ($7.25 an hour) hasn’t increased in three years. This bill would incrementally increase it to $9.80 over three years, and then be indexed to inflation.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Con Ed lockout ends — Up against Con Ed’s billions, union members from across New York City and the state joined together to support the 8,500 workers and their families who were forced to the street.
‘MITT THE TWIT’
► In The Hill — Romney stumbles in London — Mitt Romney stumbled on the first day of his foreign trip Thursday when the Republican candidate appeared to question London’s ability to host the summer Olympics.
► At TPM — Romney’s central foreign policy attack against Obama unravels — Mitt Romney has repeatedly attacked Obama over the idea that the president has ruined the U.S.’s reputation overseas. But when his own gaffes took center stage, Romney’s campaign insisted foreign opinions don’t matter.
► In today’s NY Times — Romney’s fundraisers in London draw banking crowd — Participants included some of the top American financiers working in London from firms running the gamut from private equity funds, hedge funds and big investment banks like Goldman Sachs and J. P. Morgan.
T.G.I.F.
► Continuing with the British theme, here’s one of the greatest bands to ever come out of Liverpool… Dirk, Stig, Nasty and Barry… The Rutles! Enjoy, and have a great weekend — brought to you by the Labor Movement.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m.