NEWS ROUNDUP
WA feels the Bern, SCOTUS control, ‘utopia’ in KS, LA…
Monday, March 21, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — It’s up to GOP to hold Rep. Shea accountable
► From AP — Budget negotiations ongoing in split state Legislature — As lawmakers prepared to enter the second full week of supplemental budget negotiations in an overtime special session, the political gridlock of Congress has felt closer to home for some who follow politics in Washington.
► In Sunday’s Seattle Times — Will Seattle law firm hired by legislators get paid for all its work? — Senate Republicans, who launched an “independent” investigation in the DOC’s early release of prisoners, may not wind up paying a Seattle law firm for all the work.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Poorly funded state agencies are discharging people into homelessness (by Mark Putnam, Lainey Sickinger, and Paul Lambros) — We invite the Legislature to re-engage with us in supporting evidence-based solutions that help families and individuals in crisis, and pass a state budget that provides housing and services to help those in need.
LOCAL
► From KOMO News —
► From KUOW — Renton activist released from Mexican prison: ‘We’ll keep fighting’ — She’s expected to return to the Seattle area in the coming days. Her supporters have also planned a rally for next Saturday, March 26, in downtown Seattle. That’s partly to raise awareness for other political prisoners still held in Mexico.
ALSO at The Stand — Nestora Salgado freed from prison after 2½ years
► From KUOW — Hanford contractors defend worksite culture, scrutinize whistleblower — Lawyers for whistleblower Walt Ford argued that his managers played dangerous and unsanitary pranks. Workers were injured. Companies Bechtel and URS argued that managers and workers only played harmless pranks. They also focused on the whistleblower’s personal life and mistakes on the job.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Seattle shipyards flush with work, including repairs to ‘Deadliest Catch’ crabber
CAMPAIGN 2016
► From AP — Hillary Clinton to visit Seattle, Everett Tuesday — Campaign officials say in Everett, she will discuss her plans to support Washington manufacturing and the tens of thousands of workers who depend on the Export-Import Bank. In Seattle, Clinton will attend an organizing event with volunteers, supporters, and caucus captains.
► In today’s Columbian — Thousands greet Bernie Sanders inside, outside Hudson’s Bay in Vancouver — Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders addressed an overflow crowd at Hudson’s Bay High School in Vancouver before heading inside to speak to the crowd packed in the school gym.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Bernie Sanders calls for ‘political revolution’ at packed Spokane rally — Thousands of people lined up Sunday in hopes of getting into the event. Campaign officials counted nearly 10,000. Only about 1,000 were allowed into the rally. The rest were diverted to overflow rooms, where they watched Sanders on screens.
► From Politico — Democrats to Sanders: Time to wind it down — Nearly a dozen Democratic lawmakers suggested in interviews that Sanders should focus more on stopping Donald Trump and less on why he believes Clinton’s stands on trade, financial regulation and foreign policy would make her a flawed president.
AEROSPACE
► In the Seattle Times — Airbus plants seeds of a new aerospace cluster in the U.S. — The first American-made Airbus jet built in the new final-assembly plant in Mobile, Ala., is expected to make its maiden flight this week and be delivered to JetBlue soon after. Boeing’s main competitor sees this beachhead in the U.S. as just the beginning.
SUPREME COURT
EDITOR’S NOTE — W… T… F?!
► From Think Progress — Even George Will thinks the GOP’s wall of opposition to Merrick Garland is nuts — Will’s disagreement with the GOP’s just-say-no approach to Garland is especially significant because Will’s own view of the Constitution places him well to the right of the late Justice Antonin Scalia.
► From Huffington Post — The Supreme Court and the Republican Coup D’état (by University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey Stone) — It is perfectly understandable that Senate Republicans want the Supreme Court to mirror their views and do their bidding. But that is not a constitutionally legitimate reason for the Senate to refuse to confirm a well-qualified and reasonably moderate nominee. Indeed, it is noteworthy that of the sixteen Supreme Court justices who have been confirmed since 1967, eight of them substantially altered the ideological balance on the Court. It is striking, by the way, that every one of the eight Justices whose confirmations had a substantial impact on the ideological makeup of the Supreme Court in almost half-a-century was nominated by a Republican president, and every one of them moved the Court in a more conservative direction. It is largely for that reason that the Court is more conservative today than at any time in almost a century.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
What has happened to these states should be a national story; because we are one election away from it being our national story.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.