NEWS ROUNDUP
Boeing layoffs, KING 5 union busting, the Warren plan…
Monday, February 29, 2016
BOEING
ALSO at The Stand:
— Group of House Dems unveil corporate tax accountability plan (Feb. 19)
— Strong voter support, Boeing job cuts stir renewed interest in bill (Feb. 12)
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Seattle Times — GOP-led Senate approves budget that Democrats say does too little — The Republican-led Washington Senate rejected 19 amendments offered by Democrats. The chamber eventually voted 25-22 in favor of adding about $34 million to the two-year, $38 billion operating budget adopted last year.
► In the Peninsula Daily News — Legislature to start supplemental budget negotiations this week — With both chambers of the state Legislature having passed supplemental budgets, negotiations will begin this week to hash out a version acceptable to both the Senate and House.
► From KUOW — Prescription drug sticker shock has Washington state looking for relief — The state spends about $1 billion per year on prescription drugs — that’s state and federal funds. And the cost has been going up. Now some state lawmakers are wondering if there’s a way to drive a better bargain. Or at least shed some new light on how drugs are priced.
► From KUOW — Washington puts Gov. Inslee’s carbon rules on hold — State regulators are setting aside the rules they’ve been working on to limit the amount of greenhouse gases that can be emitted into the air. The Department of Ecology was instructed by Gov. Jay Inslee to draw up the rules.
ELECTION 2016
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC opposes Initiative 732 carbon tax
► From KUOW — Hillary Clinton wins South Carolina in rout over Bernie Sanders — Hillary Clinton won the South Carolina Democratic primary on Saturday, notching a decisive win in a state where she suffered a devastating loss just eight years ago.
► In the NY Times — AFL-CIO prepares to create its own ‘Super PAC’ to get voters to the polls — The AFL-CIO, the federation of unions representing nearly 10 million workers, is preparing plans for a “super PAC” that would raise tens of millions of dollars and focus on grass-roots efforts to mobilize voters. Sources say the proposal calls for a separately funded entity that would raise money from unions, and potentially from progressive donors as well.
LOCAL
► From UnivisionSeattle — En Favor de la Liberación de Nestora Salgado — El polémico caso que seguimos paso a paso de la Mujer del área de Renton presa en México, Nestora Salgado. Nuestro compañero José Luis Gonzalez nos trae el reporte actualizado de este caso. (Includes interview with Rep. Adam Smith calling for Nestora’s release.)
ALSO at The Stand — Seattle City Council joins chorus urging Mexico to free Nestora
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► From Politico — Labor seeks revenge on free-trade Dems — Labor’s fight against the White House’ free-trade agenda is moving into the trenches in tight Democratic races, with many of the 28 moderates who supported “fast-track” trade promotion legislation now targeted for that and their likely support for the TPP… Meanwhile, the White House and trade-friendly lawmakers hope to grow support for the TPP among the two dozen Democrats who voted against fast track, including Denny Heck and Adam Smith of Washington.
► In the News Tribune — TPP isn’t a good deal for the U.S. (letter) — Perhaps (the TPP) would increase corporate profits. But here are just a few examples of other consequences. Outsourcing of jobs would increase. (Remember NAFTA? It was supposed to increase jobs, too.) Access to generic medications would be further delayed, making life-saving treatments not affordable to many. Corporations would be able to sue for loss of expected profits, such as from passage of regulations to protect the environment or limit climate change… Economist Robert Reich says, “The TPP is a Trojan horse in a global race to the bottom.” I agree.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From TPM — The unlikely GOP senator in the middle of the SCOTUS tug of war — Sen. Chuck Grassley, the 82-year-old Iowa farmer known for his typo-riddled tweets, homespun style, annual 99-county tours of Iowa, and a decades-long career in Washington, has little experience in being the focal point of a Capitol Hill political showdown in the national spotlight, but here he is thrust into history over the future of the Supreme Court.
ALSO at The Stand — Tell Senate GOP: Do your job, work to fill the vacancy
► In the Seattle Times — The strong arm of constitutional law should prevail in Supreme Court nomination (by four former U.S. attorneys) — The president is elected for a four-year term under Article II of the Constitution. There is no clause or amendment diminishing the president’s duties or powers in the last year.
NATIONAL
► From AFL-CIO Now — AFL-CIO Executive Council takes on the retirement crisis, Flint, the Zika Virus and other important issues — At their meeting last week, the AFL-CIO Executive Council issued a variety of policy statements on important issues. Take a look at those policy statements.
► In today’s NY Times — With fewer members, a diminished political role for Wisconsin unions — Wisconsin, once a labor stronghold, has lost tens of thousands of union members, and the shift has shaken the order of election-year politics.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.