NEWS ROUNDUP
Fast Track derailed, OT pay vs. CEO pay, what we’re building…
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
FAST TRACK
► From The Hill — Senate deals stinging defeat to Obama trade agenda — Senate Democrats on Tuesday delivered a stinging blow to President Obama’s trade agenda by voting to prevent the chamber from tackling fast-track legislation. A motion to cut off a filibuster and proceed to the trade bill fell short of the 60-vote hurdle, failing 52-45.
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC: Senate Democrats send ‘strong message’ on Fast Track
► From AFL-CIO Now — Richard Trumka statement on failed Senate vote on TPA
► From Politico — Obama’s war on the left — His recent skirmishes with Elizabeth Warren on trade are part of a larger campaign against what he considers calcified thinking.
► In today’s Washington Post — Obama’s trade deal: Why he’s in danger of losing (by Dana Milbank) — Let’s suppose you are trying to bring a friend around to your point of view. Would you tell her she’s emotional, illogical, outdated and not very smart? Would you complain that he’s being dishonest, fabricating falsehoods and denying reality with his knee-jerk response? Such a method of a persuasion is likelier to get you a black eye than a convert. Yet this is how President Obama treats his fellow Democrats on trade — and why he’s in danger of losing. The vast majority of lawmakers in his own party oppose him on trade legislation. Yet rather than accept that they have a legitimate beef, he shows public contempt for them.
► From Huffington Post — Trade abuse (by Leo W. Gerard) — American workers no longer are willing to engage in this abusive relationship with trade fanatics. They no longer believe the promises of change. They don’t want the federal money TPP fanatics promise them to pay for retraining as underpaid burger flippers after their middle class-supporting factory jobs are shipped overseas. They’re over trade pacts that benefit only multi-national corporations like Nike.
EDITOR’S NOTE — On Tuesday, both Murray and Cantwell voted against advancing the Fast Track legislation on a procedural motion.
► In today’s Oregonian — Ron Wyden joins fellow Democrats in blocking trade bill; says GOP leaders abandoning deal with him
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — 900 on strike today at PeaceHealth in Bellingham
► In today’s News tribune — Tacoma mayor picks Minimum Wage Task Force members — Tacoma Mayor Marilyn Strickland named members of a Minimum Wage Task Force during Tuesday’s council meeting. The group will advise the council on next steps toward a ballot measure that would compete with one activists hope will raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour.
► In the PSBJ — Foss moves ahead with Shell Oil plans despite city, port call for delay — On Tuesday, the five Port of Seattle Commissioners told Foss Maritime Co. to delay the presence of Shell Oil at Terminal 5 until the permitting was worked out. Foss, however, is appealing the decision and said the first of Shell’s ships will arrive this week.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — A banner year for Port of Longview revenues — Port of Longview posted a record year in revenue in 2014, boosted by imports of calcined coke and exports of grain and scrap steel.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Second shot to reduce carbon (editorial) — While there was merit in the governor’s proposal to use the carbon tax revenue for transportation projects, the Legislature, specifically Republicans, seem content to fund the transportation budget through an increase to the gas tax. Assuming that is a method legislators will stick with, it does free up the revenue to go elsewhere. Education, jobs and a gradual approach to the carbon tax seems an appropriate mix.
► In today’s Columbian — Walkout by local teachers set for today — Nearly 2,500 teachers in four Clark County school districts are participating in a one-day walkout today. As a result, school buildings will be shuttered for almost 38,000 students. That means almost half of the 80,000 K-12 students in the county’s public schools won’t be in school today.
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Statewide coverage expands under Affordable Care Act (editorial) — Before the Affordable Care Act, which also expanded Medicaid eligibility, 13 percent of Spokane County residents were uninsured. As of February, that figure was 3 percent. Nationwide, an estimated 16.4 million Americans have gained health care coverage.
► From AP — No fallout for congressional health plan — Members of Congress, staffers and dependents get their health insurance under a little-known provision of “Obamacare.” But if the Supreme Court strikes down government health care subsidies for millions of people in more than 30 states, legal and benefits experts say coverage for lawmakers won’t be affected.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From Politico — As appropriations battle kicks off, another fiscal cliff? — The heart of the batting order is due up in the House Appropriations Committee beginning Wednesday: four major spending bills that will capture all the contradictions in the new Republican budget over the next month.
NATIONAL
► From AP — Union workers vote to end strike at BP refinery in Indiana — USW members at a BP refinery in northwest Indiana have voted to approve a new contract and end a strike lasting more than three months.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► From AfroPunk — #ManifestJustice art exhibit in Los Angeles
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.