NEWS ROUNDUP
Fast Track revived, budget urgency, pension cuts…
Thursday, June 18, 2015
FAST TRACK
► THIS MORNING at The Stand — House cuts TAA loose, passes Fast Track — As they did last week, Reps. Denny Heck, Jim McDermott and Adam Smith voted “no” on Fast Track today, but it narrowly passed 218-208. Reps. Rick Larsen, Derek Kilmer and Suzan DelBene again voted “yes,” alongside Republican Reps. Dave Reichert, Dan Newhouse, Jaime Herrera Beutler and Cathy McMorris Rodgers.
EDITOR’S NOTE — After some personal lobbying from Boeing CEO Jim McNerney, Sen. Cantwell agreed to support a key procedural motion advancing Fast Track last month in exchange for a commitment from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to bring the Ex-Im bill to a vote. McConnell still hasn’t made good on that commitment. Meanwhile, Jeff Immelt, the CEO of GE, which is a key Boeing supplier of jet engines, has now threatened to move American jobs overseas if Congress doesn’t pass the Ex-Im bill. And who are Congressional Democrats angry at for their “scorched-earth” tactics? Unions.
► In today’s NY Times — Trade bill’s fate rests on what’s been missing in Congress: trust — Pro-trade Democrats in the Senate now find themselves in a place of both power and panic as they weigh whether to help Republicans retaliate against House Democrats, all the while trusting those same Republicans to help pass the worker assistance program.
► From Politico — Dems still steamed over labor’s trade attacks — Democrats are still seething over the scorched-earth tactics that unions employed en route to their dramatic, if perhaps short-lived victory on the House floor.
As we look to the future, it is clear that the debate on the trade authority is probably the last of its kind. The intense debate of the past few weeks has further convinced me that we need a new paradigm.
That is one of the most important political events of the past several years. Investor oriented globalization faces by far its most serious challenge — now its up to those of us who have been left out of trade diplomacy to come forward with better ideas.
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand:
‘Stop the shutdown!’ Unity Rallies across Washington TODAY
As state shutdown looms, the sounds of silence (by Bill Lyne) — The silence (from budget negotiators) has echoed the larger silence that has grown louder every day: the silence of the corporate community on the issue of taxes and revenue.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Capital-gains tax is best option to fund Senate bipartisan plan on education (editorial) — The bipartisan proposal to overhaul the state’s education-funding system is a welcome sign of progress, but lawmakers must decide on how to raise more money for schools. A capital-gains tax may be the best option.
► From KOMO — Group to lawmakers: Don’t attend U.S. Open until budget is done — “Today we are strongly calling on state Senate leaders (Bruce) Dammeier and (Steve) O’Ban to skip the U.S. Open and get back to work,” said Heather Weiner of Washington United for Fair Revenue.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Stop starving the PDC (editorial) — The Legislature must, at the very least, stop bleeding the public’s campaign-finance watchdog. A budget proposal by the Republican-led Senate would cut three more staff positions, including the agency’s in-house counsel, and would curtail needed information-technology improvements.
► From AP — Transportation revenue talks stall in state Legislature — House Democrats in Washington state have stopped negotiations on a transportation revenue package until a state operating budget deal is reached, said Rep. Judy Clibborn.
LOCAL
► In the PSBJ — Everett gets a big boost: Boeing lands largest 747 order in 25 years — Boeing has landed its largest order for the four-engine 747 jet in a quarter century, a 20-jet order from Volga-Dnepr Group, a Russian cargo carrier.
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma’s $15 wage initiative could be withdrawn, though unlikely — There’s a chance 15 Now Tacoma could withdraw its initiative to raise the minimum wage in Tacoma to $15 per hour. If it does, here’s how it would work.
► In the PSBJ — No layoffs for skycap workers after Alaska Air Group switches providers — The new employer, G2 Secure Staff of Irvine, Texas, has agreed to honor the union contract the workers won from out-going Bags Inc., said Fred Prockiw of SEIU Local 6.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Workers seek back pay from Snohomish blueberry farm — A class-action complaint has been filed on behalf of about 35 immigrant farm workers in King County Superior Court against Golden Eagle Farms.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From Politico — Highway cliff vexes Republicans — Congress is hurtling toward an imminent funding cliff for highways and bridges with no apparent plan to avoid a summertime construction shutdown. There are emerging divisions between House and Senate GOP leaders, who now have fewer than six weeks to deal with a vexing highway problem that’s been unsolved for seven years and costs billions just to keep on life support past July 31.
► From AP — House ready to repeal pieces of Obama health care law — Despite White House veto threats, the House is ready to vote to repeal taxes on medical devices and kill a Medicare advisory board that foes say would ration health care.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Only insurance companies should be allowed to ration care!
► In today’s NY Times — Destructive health care proposals (editorial) — House Republicans are moving two bills to repeal small but important provisions of the health care law.
► From AP — Agency: Staff cuts take toll on IRS tax enforcement efforts — Budget cuts to the IRS are hampering the agency’s efforts to uncover tax cheats, an agency watchdog said Wednesday, and more trims are on the way under legislation approved by a GOP-controlled House panel.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Speaking of tax cheats…
NATIONAL
► From In These Times — California court ruling could make it nearly impossible for farmworkers to win union contracts — On May 18, the state’s Court of Appeals ruled that a key provision of the state’s unique labor law for field workers is unconstitutional. Should it be upheld by the state’s supreme court, this decision will profoundly affect the ability of California farm workers to gain union contracts.
► In the Washington Post — Uber driver is an employee, not a contractor, California regulators say — California’s Labor Commission has ruled that an Uber driver was an employee, not a contractor, a potentially costly precedent for the ride-sharing company.
► From AFL-CIO Now — Union-made Father’s Day ideas — Celebrate your dad in solidarity style this Father’s Day by getting him a gift that sports the union label.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.