NEWS ROUNDUP
Koster’s ‘rape thing,’ WSF staffing, PSNS hiring, Mitt fudging…
Thursday, November 1, 2012
STATE ELECTIONS
EDITOR’S NOTE — And with that, John Koster goes national, joining Todd “Legitimate Rape” Akin, Richard “Something God Intended” Mourdock, and more than a dozen other radical right-wingers who’ve tumbled out this particular clown car. Not only do these men disagree with most Americans on the issue — 76% of Republicans, 90% of Democrats and 81% of independents believe that abortion should be legal in cases of rape and incest — they manage to diminish the horror and violence of rape with their stupid words and their biological idiocy.
► From KING5.com — KING 5 poll: Governor’s race a dead heat — Just five days before election day, a new KING 5 poll finds the race for governor is a dead heat, with Democrat Jay Inslee at 47%, Republican Rob McKenna at 46% — within the poll’s margin of error.
► From AP — Mexico study — Pot legalization in U.S. cuts cartel profits — A study released Wednesday by a respected Mexican think tank asserts that proposals to legalize the recreational use of marijuana in Colorado, Oregon and Washington could cut Mexican drug cartels’ earnings from traffic to the U.S. by as much as 30%.
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — The entire staff of The Stand commutes to work via ferry. In conversations with fellow passengers, we have been astounded to hear people repeatedly speculate that the cancelled runs that have occurred since the WSF cut staffing in June were some kind of union work slowdown. In truth, the Inlandboatmen’s Union has been working with the WSF to try to avoid cancellations, but these staffing/budget cuts left no margin for error. Maybe if the WSF officials hadn’t speculated that unions were to blame to the ferry muckrakers at KING-TV, passengers would be accurately blaming budget cuts and lack of revenue for the problem and not the dedicated WSF workers.
► At MyNorthwest.com — Liquor boosting much worse than first reported— Washington state has been out of the liquor business for around five months, and in that time private retailers have discovered some challenges in keeping the once state-controlled product from disappearing off store shelves. KIRO Radio reported earlier this month that liquor theft is a major problem across the state, but it turns out the issue is much worse than originally thought.
BOEING
► In today’s Seattle Times — United gets its 787 a little late — United took delivery of its second 787 Dreamliner on Wednesday, just days later than anticipated earlier. Separately, a seat supplier has caused a seven-week delay in delivery of a 777 to American Airlines.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Boeing opens another local facility for KC-46 tanker — Boeing opened a system integration laboratory “to support testing and reduce risk” on the tanker. The lab is located at Boeing Field in Seattle.
LOCAL
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Future not necessarily dark for Semiahmoo Hotel— At least one major hotel management firm remains interested in acquiring the hotel slated for a Dec. 1 shutdown.
► At Crosscut — Manufacturing’s race to the bottom (by Daniel Jack Chasan) — Consumer demand has forced Northwest companies like REI and Nike to off-shore their manufacturing processes. The result: poor working conditions and unnecessary deaths
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
In Ohio, where the auto industry accounts for one out of eight jobs, voters have stuck with President Obama after he stuck his neck out to rescue those ailing giants and the workers, who together form America’s cornerstone industry. Because of President Obama’s action, the U.S. auto industry was not liquidated. Two million jobs or more were not lost or ruined.
► In today’s Washington Post — An unlikely political pair, united by a storm — The scene of President Obama greeting his onetime political antagonist Gov. Chris Christie in Atlantic City was a striking departure from what has become an increasingly bitter campaign.
► In The Onion — Paul Ryan releases 90-minute high-endurance budget-slashing video — “Oh, yeah, we’re really in the groove now,” Ryan says a half hour into the video, after he finishes running up the eligibility age for Social Security. Later in the program, Ryan unveils several more advanced cost-cutting measures, including “maximum intensity” public education tucks to isolate excess Pell and Title I grants, and a rigorous 20-minute “Social Insurance Shredder” routine that the congressman says is “guaranteed to remove any traces of Medicaid and Medicare from your system.”
NATIONAL
► At Politico — Cathy McMorris Rodgers, rising GOP star— Her supporters are publicly saying she has already locked up enough support to win her race against Georgia Rep. Tom Price for the No. 4 spot in House Republican leadership.
► In today’s Washington Post — Health insurers ready post-election message: ‘We’re not the bad guys!’ — Moving into a potential debate over deficit reduction, health insurers are arming their lobbyists with data that argues that other health care sectors are actually the ones to blame.
SHOP UNION!
EDITOR’S NOTE — You’ll note that this article lists Alaska Airlines as having IAM-represented baggage handlers. Alaska infamously busted the IAM baggage handlers at SeaTac Airport in 2005. After those workers rejected the airline’s contract offer to cut their wages from more than $20 an hour to $14 an hour, Alaska fired all 472 of its baggage handlers here and contracted out their jobs to nonunion Menzies Aviation. (The new low-wage workers promptly began damaging jets, including one jet that lost cabin pressure after a worker failed to report he had ruptured it with the baggage loader.) However, IAM does continue to represent some of the airline’s baggage handlers in Alaska and other airports.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m.