NEWS ROUNDUP
Centrist nominees, truth about trade, polyester’s comeback…
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
SUPREME COURT
CAMPAIGN 2016
► In today’s NY Times — Clinton, Trump are winning votes, but not hearts — Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton’s resounding triumphs on Tuesday masked a profound, historic and unusual reality: Most Americans still don’t like him. Or her.
► In today’s Washington Post — The Stop Trump movement’s last realistic hope: A contested convention in Cleveland — A contested Republican convention looks increasingly possible, if not probable.
► From Gawker — Poll: Two-thirds of GOP voters on Tuesday support Trump’s proposed Muslim ban — According to exit polls, about two-thirds of Republican primary voters on Tuesday support Donald Trump’s proposal to temporarily ban Muslim tourists and immigrants from entering the United States.
► In today’s Columbian — Benton jumps on Trump bandwagon — Longtime Republican Sen. Don Benton, who represents Vancouver in Olympia, announced he’s endorsing Donald Trump in the GOP presidential race.
► In today’s NY Times — What’s next for both parties (editorial) — After decades of pandering to intolerance while working against the needs of working-class Americans and minorities, the Republican Party appears headed for disaster… While Hillary Clinton continues her march toward the nomination, the weakness of her appeal among the young, independents, men and some working-class voters cannot be ignored.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From KPLU — Tax limiting initiative now in hands of state Supreme Court — The court heard oral arguments about the legality of anti-tax activist Tim Eyman’s latest voter-approved initiative. I-1366 would cut the state sales tax by one percentage point unless lawmakers put a constitutional amendment on the ballot to require a two-thirds vote in the legislature for future tax increases. Two months ago, a superior court judge ruled it violated several provisions of the state constitution. The state Supreme Court typically takes six months to a year to decide whether to uphold or reverse lower court rulings.
► In today’s Olympian — Washington marijuana shoppers may now leave a tip — Tipping had previously “not been an allowable process,” according to the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board. But the Board has revisited the policy and effective immediately, “customer tipping is now an allowable practice in licensed retail marijuana stores.”
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Local counties the bright spot in state’s unemployment picture — King, Snohomish and Pierce counties remain a bright spot for employment compared with the rest of the state.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Tri-City labor market posts 34th month of growth
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima City Council moves toward abandoning appeal of ACLU lawsuit over election districts — The council has scheduled an April vote in which it is expected to rescind its appeal of the ACLU voting rights lawsuit that changed elections last year.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — GOP hits a wall with election-year budget plan — About two-dozen fiscal hawks vowed to oppose the House GOP’s plan before it was formally released, which will make passing a budget on the floor difficult.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — No major issues found in ill nuclear worker program review — The Department of Labor is generally following correct procedures to decide claims to compensate ill Hanford and other workers for exposures to toxic chemicals, according to a GAO audit report.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sanders’ wrong-way trade policy bad for Washington businesses, workers (by Chris Gregoire) — Every Democrat in Congress, except one in the U.S. Senate, fought against Republican attempts to kill the Export-Import Bank. The holdout who joined Republican efforts to shut down the bank was Sen. Bernie Sanders.
NATIONAL
► In the Washington Post — When it comes to policies to raise wages, who’s singing and who’s lip syncing? (by Jared Bernstein) — One of the most important factors suppressing pay is the persistently low bargaining power of many workers, and this in turn relates to the absence of two forces that depress the ability of many U.S. workers to get paid what they should: full employment and collective bargaining.
► In today’s NY Times — China seeks to avoid mass layoffs while cutting production — Remarks by Premier Li Keqiang reflected the difficult — some say unsustainable — policy combination that China’s leaders hope to achieve.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.