NEWS ROUNDUP
Vote on voting rights, Uber decides what fits, #DoYourJob…
Thursday, March 3, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — Will Senate Republicans kill this important legislation again — this time in an election year — by refusing to vote on it? Stay tuned.
► In today’s News Tribune — Teachers in limbo (editorial) — Teachers might be interested in a small bill that has quietly and unanimously passed the Legislature. HB 2023 will give school districts more time to notify teachers and other certificated staff that they won’t have a job the next school year.
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC opposes Initiative 732 carbon tax
► In today’s NY Times — Does a carbon tax work? Ask British Columbia — Their experience shows that cutting carbon emissions enough to make a difference in preventing global warming remains a difficult challenge. But the most important takeaway for American skeptics is that the policy basically worked as advertised.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Republicans control the Indiana House by a 71-29 supermajority and they apparently have no problem holding recipients of corporate tax breaks accountable.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Union-supporting Uber driver reinstated following outcry
► In today’s Olympian — Contract approved for North Thurston teachers — The school board voted to approve a two-year contract with the North Thurston Education Association, representing about 950 teachers in Thurston County’s largest public school system. The teachers had worked under an expired contract for nearly half of the school year.
BOEING
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing wrestles with options for new midsize jet — Airline industry insiders are divided about how Boeing should counter the Airbus A321 with a so-called “middle-of-market” airplane. The answer could affect the future of Boeing’s Puget Sound-area assembly work.
ELECTION 2016
► From Politico — There’s still time for a Primary bombshell — After their Super Tuesday romps, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have certainly tightened their grips on the Democratic and Republican nominations. But they haven’t been crowned the winners just yet. And it’s still only early March — plenty of time for a primary bombshell that could shake up the entire race.
From New York magazine — More bad news for Marco Rubio: He just lost the support of Fox News — Throughout the primary, Fox provided Rubio with friendly interviews and key bookings. Many of the network’s top pundits have been enthusiastic boosters. But this alliance now seems to be over. According to three Fox sources, Fox chief Roger Ailes has told people he’s lost confidence in Rubio’s ability to win. “We’re finished with Rubio,” Ailes recently told a Fox host. “We can’t do the Rubio thing anymore.”
► From The Hill — GOP split over accepting Trump — Trump’s rise has stunned establishment Republicans, who have been grasping for any strategy that might deny Trump the nomination. Among Senate Republicans, there’s a growing feeling that opposition to Trump would backfire, given voter distrust of the GOP establishment.
► From The Hill — 22 Republicans who won’t back Trump as nominee
EDITOR’S NOTE — Spoiler alert: You won’t find any Republicans from Washington state in the list.
► Also from The Onion — Smiling nation takes moment to enjoy thought of what RNC headquarters like right now
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► In today’s News Tribune — TPP about more than politicking (by G It is shortsighted to argue that the TPP is highly contested because of protectionism and party politics. The TPP is debated because it is problematic, and its details were long kept secret from the public. Bernie Sanders opposes the TPP not “as a way to make inroads with labor unions and workers,” but because he stands up to corporate domination and abuse.
ALSO at The Stand — As TPP opposition mounts, will Congress listen?
SUPREME COURT
► In today’s NY Times — Obama said to be vetting Iowa judge for Supreme Court seat — President Obama is vetting Jane L. Kelly, a federal appellate judge in Iowa, as a potential nominee for the Supreme Court, weighing a selection that could pose an awkward dilemma for her home-state senator Charles Grassley, who has pledged to block the president from filling the vacancy.
NATIONAL
► From Think Progress — Farmworkers forced to go back to work after being exposed to pesticides — The incident is symptomatic of the types of issues that farmworkers often run into nationwide. In fact, up to 20,000 pesticide poisonings are reported by farmworkers every year.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► From The Atlantic — Life in the only industrialized country without paid maternity leave — Many cultures have rules for new mothers and babies. The Latin American cuarentena and the Uzbek chilla represent 40 days of rest and social support. In China, women rest in bed for a month; in Korea, for 21 days. In the United States, however, the time for rest, bonding, and recovery often is determined not by tradition, or even by a doctor’s recommendations, but by the new mother’s employment situation… In the U.S., 70 percent of mothers work outside the home and 40 percent of households are led by a female breadwinner. When it comes to a new baby or a sick family member, 88 percent of the American workforce has no access to paid leave, and half of new, working mothers are ineligible even for the Family Medical Leave Act’s unpaid leave.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.