NEWS ROUNDUP
Tax the regents, Jayapal scores, GOP silence…
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Strong solidarity at the Green River strike (by Lynne Dodson)
MORE coverage from the Enumclaw Courier-Herald, KIRO TV, and the Seattle Times.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Feds pass out paychecks to blueberry workers — A handful of local farm workers received more than $6,000 in back wages and damages Monday. The checks come four months after the U.S. Secretary of Labor settled a long-running legal dispute with Washington blueberry growers, including Walla Walla’s Blue Mountain Farms LLC.
STATE GOVERNMENT
ELECTION 2016
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC delegates make 2016 election endorsements
► From Politico — Trump fuels Democratic voter surge — When the deadline to register to vote in California’s June 7 primary closes Monday evening, Democrats are expected to be the big winners. The party has enjoyed a dramatic spike in registration since the beginning of the year — and they have Donald Trump to thank for it.
IF YOU CAN’T BEAT ‘EM… CHEAT ‘EM
► From Think Progress — One of the most aggressive gerrymanders in the country just lost in the Supreme Court — Nearly two years ago, a federal court struck down Virginia’s congressional maps, finding that state lawmakers engaged in an unconstitutional racial gerrymander when they packed tens of thousands of African-American voters into the already strongly Democratic district. On Monday, the Supreme Court dismissed an appeal brought by three Republican members of Congress who hoped to maintain the old maps.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — GOP lawmaker: ‘Republicans were wrong’ to block Garland — Rep. Dan Donovan (R-N.Y.) on Monday called on the Senate to vote on President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, a move that has the targeted House member breaking from his party. Donovan said the refusal to hold a hearing for nominee Merrick Garland is the reason Americans are frustrated by government.
► From TPM — Republicans breaking Obamacare so they can declare it broken — After the failure of two major Obamacare lawsuits at the Supreme Court, Republicans haven’t stopped swinging and, in some instances, have even drawn blood. The more recent assaults merely undermine how the law is supposed to work. This is to the detriment of consumers and the insurers trying to cover them, to be sure, but it also creates market instability that Republicans can then use to rail against the Affordable Care Act.
EDITOR’S NOTE — That headline could be published daily. Just substitute the word “government” for “Obamacare.”
NATIONAL
► In today’s Washington Post — The Occupy movement has grown up — and looks to inflict real pain on big banks — Capitalizing on populist anger toward Wall Street, a coalition of more than 20 labor unions and activist groups plan to announce on Tuesday the launch of a new campaign to reform the financial industry. The group, Take On Wall Street, plan to combine the efforts of some of the Democratic Party’s biggest traditional backers, from the American Federation of Teachers and the AFL-CIO to the Communications Workers of America. The group says it will aim to turn the public’s lingering anger at the financial sector into policy initiatives that could change the way that Wall Street works.
► In today’s NY Times — Sex Shop workers welcome the protections of a retail union — The employees of Babeland, an adult toy store in New York City, voted to join a labor union, citing common issues and others specific to their work and to transgender employees.
► In today’s NY Times — New York attorney general accuses Domino’s of wage theft in lawsuit — According to a suit against the corporate franchiser that owns Domino’s Pizza, a computer system used across the state systematically undercounted hours worked by employees.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.