NEWS ROUNDUP
Eyman’s latest scam, Hillary makes history, unity wins…
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
LOCAL
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — KapStone fined for $71,800 for safety violations — The company faces $71,800 in state fines for health and safety violations at its Longview mill last November, including a “near miss” when a paper machine was nearly started with a contract worker inside.
► In today’s Oregonian — Daimler Trucks will lay off 170 at Western Star factory in Portland — Daimler Trucks North America said Monday it will lay off 1,240 workers in the U.S. and Mexico — including 170 at its Western Star factory on Swan Island — amid a downturn in demand for long-haul trucks.
ELECTION 2016
► In today’s NY Times — The judicial system according to Donald Trump (editorial) — Trump is essentially arguing that his own bigoted attitude toward Mexicans has disqualified a respected jurist from hearing a court case in which he is a defendant. Under that bizarre logic, he could rationalize ruling out judges from every demographic group he has insulted or happens not to like. At the rate he’s going, there would soon be no person in the land left to judge him.
► In the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — Unions sign labor agreement for Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia — The Democratic National Convention Committee has signed an official project labor agreement with local trade unions for work at convention venues in Philadelphia, a union-strong city that contrasts sharply with Charlotte, N.C., site of the party’s last nominating convention.
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► In the Int’l Business Times — State Department blocks release of Hillary Clinton-era TPP emails until after the election — Trade is a hot issue in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. But correspondence from Hillary Clinton and her top State Department aides about a controversial 12-nation trade deal will not be available for public review — at least not until after the election. The Obama administration abruptly blocked the release of Clinton’s State Department correspondence about the so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), after first saying it expected to produce the emails this spring.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From the Hill — Obama nominee died after waiting two years for confirmation — Cassandra Butts, a friend of President Obama since law school, died on May 26 at the age of 50 — 835 days after he nominated her to be the ambassador to the Bahamas. Butts told a columnist that Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) was purposely holding up her confirmation process in order to anger the president.
► In today’s NY Times — Republicans to unveil plan to revamp Dodd-Frank — Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) on Tuesday will outline the Financial Choice Act, which would roll back major elements of the regulatory law.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — Mass employment, not mass incarceration — WSLC President Jeff Johnson’s account of a tour of the Washington Corrections Center for Women at Purdy with leaders from the AFL-CIO, international unions, Free America, and R&B sensation John Legend.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Helen Chavez, widow of Cesar Chavez, dies at 88 — Born Helen Fabela, she met Cesar Chavez while working in the fields in California’s Central Valley and the couple married in 1948.
► From TPM — Introducing our feature series on privatization (editor’s note) — Privatization is one of the most significant and pervasive politico-economic trends in the United States in the last half century. Today TPM is kicking off a richly reported four-part series on privatization and the privatization movement in the United States.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► Watch John Oliver on “Last Week Tonight” as he explains the hazards of predatory debt collection. And then watch as he purchases $14.9 million worth of medical debt for just under $60,000, and forgives it.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.