NEWS ROUNDUP
Budget jockeys, Times dumbs it down, SCOTUS attack dogs…
Monday, March 14, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From KUOW — Budget sparks fly as Washington lawmakers begin special session — Senate Republicans went public with their latest budget offer and House Democrats quickly cried foul. House Majority Leader Pat Sullivan questioned why the offer wasn’t made privately before the clock ran out on the regular session.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Sharing in the pain of state budget inaction (editorial) — Whether his [veto] remedy works or not, Inslee’s diagnosis is correct: The Legislature has required special sessions to finish its work in six of the past seven years. Seeking a better position from which to negotiate, talks on the most contentious issues among House and Senate, Democrats and Republicans, are routinely put off until the final days, if not final hours, of a session, forcing extra innings, a record three 30-day sessions last year.
► In today’s NY Times — Justice Dept. condemns profit-minded court policies targeting the poor — The Justice Department on Monday called on state judges across the country to root out unconstitutional policies that have locked poor people in a cycle of fines, debt and jail.
► From AP — Law lets Washington legislators keep emails private — Top lawmakers in Washington largely exempt themselves from the state’s public records law, and their offices did not release emails sent and received by their government accounts when requested.
► In the Spokesman-Review — Aviation tax break makes stranger bedfellows (by Jim Camden)
LOCAL
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► In today’s NY Times — The era of Free Trade might be over. That’s a good thing. (by Jared Bernstein) — We should welcome the end of the era of F.T.A.s, which had long devolved into handshakes between corporate and investor interests on both sides of the border, allowing little voice for working people. With such noise behind us, we might be ready to foster the next generation of advanced production and help our exporters fight back against currency manipulators. That would be more productive than fighting tooth and nail over the next big trade deal.
EDITOR’S NOTE — This editorial is yet another uncritical, dismissive pat-on-the-head from the state’s media establishment, dumbing down one of the most important economic issues of our time into simplistic name-calling. As always, it conflates opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership or any other FTA with opposition to trade or trade-dependent jobs. As always, it conflates opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership or any other FTA with opposition to trade or trade-dependent jobs. As always, it completely ignores the demonstrable negative consequences of previous FTAs on America’s working class, the U.S. manufacturing sector, and the environment. It dismisses the resulting anger and opposition to FTAs as “politics.” And it takes the weakest intellectual road of all, dismissing TPP critics with labels — Isolationist! Protectionist!
As WSLC President Jeff Johnson recently wrote:
Here in Washington state, we never seem to have a serious debate about whether these free-trade deals are really good for people or the planet. Our state’s elected officials often willfully ignore the clear connections between decades of globalization under these deals, the growing crisis of climate change and an out-of-balance U.S. economy that has decimated the middle class.
Instead, the debate gets dumbed down to this: “Washington is a trade-dependent state. This deal will increase trade. We should support it.”
Let’s dig deeper. This is too important. We need to get this right.
CAMPAIGN 2016
► In the Seattle Times — Schools chief Randy Dorn may run for governor, says no one has plan to fund schools — State schools chief Randy Dorn is considering an independent run for governor, arguing Democrats and Republicans alike have failed to adequately fund public schools despite a Supreme Court contempt order.
► From Politico — Top Democrats turn to Perez as sleeper VP — The Labor secretary has emerged as a vice presidential sleeper pick, with chatter building among top Democrats — including Elizabeth Warren.
► From Reuters — U.S. labor powerhouse to launch anti-Trump ad campaign — The AFL-CIO will launch digital attack ads targeting Republican front-runner Donald Trump next week as part of a multi-pronged effort to derail the New York billionaire’s bid for the White House and dampen union workers’ enthusiasm for him.
► From TPM — The furies unleashed — Trump rallies have emerged now as a stage where supporters feel empowered to take in-the-moment action against the “the other” that Trump so fervently rails against from the stump. While the huge events have often attracted chaotic crowds, the events have taken a turn for the dangerous.
SUPREME COURT
► In the Washington Post — Obama reportedly is down to three finalists for Supreme Court vacancy — The three under consideration are Merrick Garland, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; Sri Srinivasan, a judge on the same court; and Paul Watford, a judge on the California-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.
► From Think Progress — The war against Obama’s potential Supreme Court nominees takes an ugly, offensive turn — We do not yet know who President Obama will name to succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia. We do know, however, that anyone the president names will be subjected to a brutal campaign to discredit them in the eyes of the public.
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — Labor protests multiply in China as economy slows, worrying leaders — As China’s economy slows after more than two decades of breakneck growth, strikes and labor protests have erupted across the country. Factories, mines and other businesses are withholding wages and benefits, laying off staff or shutting down altogether. Worried about their prospects in a gloomy job market, workers are fighting back with unusual ferocity.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.