NEWS ROUNDUP
Boeing bashes IAM, scaring America, Chamber’s dirty work…
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
BOEING
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing faults Machinists union for opposing Norwegian Air expansion — Boeing on Tuesday weighed in for the first time with a definitive public statement on a hot political controversy in the aviation world — Norwegian Air International’s attempt to expand routes in the U.S. — choosing to use the issue as a stick to try to beat back the Machinists union’s efforts to organize its assembly plants in South Carolina.
► From the ALPA — #DenyNAI – Learn why — The CEO of Norwegian Air International wants to bring the maritime industry’s flag-of-convenience business model to the U.S. airline industry. If unopposed, this scheme will decimate our airlines and eliminate U.S. aviation jobs. It also raises serious safety questions. Learn more here and join the effort to #DenyNAI.
ALSO at The Stand — Deny NAI: We must protect open, fair aviation competition (by Reps. Rick Larsen, Peter DeFazio and Frank LoBiondo — May 5, 2016)
► In today’s Washington Post — Boeing nears landmark deal to sell airliners to Iran — Iran is set to unveil terms of a multibillion-dollar deal to purchase about 100 commercial passenger planes from Boeing in what would be the biggest sale of U.S. goods to Iran since the easing of economic sanctions last October. Although financing arrangements are not complete, the historic agreement is likely to cover deliveries and services over nearly a decade at a cost of more than $17 billion.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s News Tribune — Last-minute legal stay means no jail for state hospital CEO – yet — Pierce County Court Commissioner Craig Adams granted a last-minute request for a stay of his June 10 order that required hospital CEO Cheryl Strange to report to jail Wednesday. The dispute stems from a continuing shortage of beds at Western State, and the byproduct of patients in need of treatment being detained in hospital emergency rooms. The practice is known as “psychiatric boarding.”
ELECTION 2016
► From KUOW — Clinton, Sanders discuss party unity, path forward against Trump — Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders met Tuesday evening to try to start healing wounds from their long, bitter primary battle. Both campaigns reported that the two congratulated each other on their primary runs and talked about how they could unify the party against “the dangerous threat that Donald Trump poses to our nation.”
► From Huffington Post — Some Republicans can’t even bear to acknowledge Trump’s existence — Some claimed they had simply not heard Trump’s speech the day prior in which he doubled down on his proposal to ban Muslims from entering the United States.
► In today’s Washington Post — Top Republicans join Obama in denouncing Trump’s words — House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) denounced Trump for trying to rally support for his anti-Muslim policies.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Oh, but he still plans to vote for him. Because, you know, he’s a Republican.
► From The Hill — Union leaders see no evidence of migration to Donald Trump — Local union leaders across the Rust Belt are voicing confidence that their members will stick with Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump in the race for the White House.
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — U.S. Chamber out of step with its board, report finds — None of the 108 board members of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce came forward to explicitly support the lobbying group’s policies on tobacco and climate change, according to a new report from a group of eight Senate Democrats, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.
► From Buzzfeed — 5,000 Macy’s staff set to begin strike on Wednesday — About 5,000 Macy’s workers at five New York stores, including the chain’s Herald Square flagship, plan to walk off the job on Wednesday. The employees voted to authorize a strike earlier this month after their contract negotiations stalled over the increasing cost of healthcare benefits, changes to pay structure, and new holiday work requirements.
► From ESPN — Working class hero? Tom Brady aims for the Supreme Court — Tom Brady’s case is no longer about deflated footballs or a four-game suspension — it’s about the fundamental rights of American workers and a dangerous threat to industrial peace in America. At least that’s the case Brady and his new lawyer are not only trying to make but sell to the U.S. Supreme Court. To do so, they’ve assembled an all-star team of labor leaders, scholars and experts.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The WSLC supported state legislation called the Worker Privacy Act that would have allowed employees to opt out of such nonsense without fear of retaliation, but it failed to pass even when Democrats controlled the state House, Senate and Governor’s office.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.