NEWS ROUNDUP
Glaziers strike ends, VOTE, stupid reaps what stupid sows…
Monday, August 1, 2016
LOCAL
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Back on the job: Glassworkers end strike (subscription required) — The strike lasted around three weeks, and affected at least 90 percent of the construction projects in booming downtown Seattle.
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — Glaziers’ strike slows construction in Seattle, Everett, elsewhere
► From Slog — Uber reportedly hired an intelligence firm to investigate union politics in Seattle — When the Seattle City Council passed an unprecedented law allowing ride-share drivers in Seattle to unionize last year, everyone knew a lawsuit was coming. But it’s unlikely the politicians and labor leaders involved in the law expected this: an Uber-funded investigation of local union politics by a CIA-linked intelligence company.
► From KUOW — Uber drivers want rate hikes – but not all want a union — The Seattle City Council has voted to offer union representation to drivers for Uber and Lyft. On Wednesday, Aug. 3, they’ll hear from city officials on how that process is going. The ordinance affecting all for-hire drivers is scheduled to take effect in September.
► In the Seattle Times — Training, jobs open up as maritime sector’s workforce ages — Local training programs are channeling people previously unfamiliar with welding or maritime engineering into an industry that anchors many solid, middle-income jobs.
► In the Yakima H-R — No end in sight for 60,000-acre Yakima County fire; several others burn throughout Eastern Washington
EDITOR’S NOTE — To the dedicated fire fighters and other public employees tackling this emergency: thank you, and be safe.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From WFSE — It’s not over in the fight to stop the Freedom Foundation from getting your private information — The fight to stop the Freedom Foundation from getting state employees’ date of birth and other private information is headed to the State Court of Appeals after a Thurston County Superior Court judge ruled Friday against a coalition of labor unions fighting to keep that information private.
STATE ELECTIONS
► In the Spokesman-Review — Washington voters have until Tuesday to fill out long, crowded ballot — The primary ballots sitting somewhere in most voters’ homes – and state elections officials say only about one in eight had been turned in as of Friday – have 17 choices for U.S. senator, 11 for governor, 11 for lieutenant governor and five for the U.S. representative in Eastern Washington’s 5th District.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Beware of misleading political ads (by Kate Riley) — Case in point: The Washington State Republican Party is running a video advertisement against Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee’s re-election that deliberately misrepresents a Seattle Times editorial board position. The ad suggested The Times accused the governor of criminal behavior. The editorial board did not. And we have asked the party to correct the ad. Party officials so far are doubling down.
► In today’s News Tribune — Primary election won’t matter in many races – but donors are still watching closely
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
► In the Christian Science Monitor — Voter ID movement stumbles in courts, as judges ID racism — Three courts on Friday struck down parts of controversial voter ID requirements put in place by Republicans, with one of those courts citing “clear discriminatory intent” by lawmakers in North Carolina to shrink the franchise for politically powerful U.S. minorities.
► In the NY Times — Critics see efforts to purge minorities from the voter rolls in new election rules — Since the Supreme Court’s 5-to-4 ruling in the case [that weakened provisions of the 1965 Voting Rights Act], critics argue, the blatant efforts to keep minorities from voting have been supplanted by a blizzard of more subtle changes.
► From Vox — Donald Trump’s slander of Captain Humayun Khan’s family is horrifying, even for Trump (by Ezra Klein) — Trump listened to a speech by the bereaved father of a fallen Muslim soldier and used it to slander the fallen soldier’s family. That was his response. That is his character… This isn’t partisan. This isn’t left vs. right. Mitt Romney never would have said this. John McCain never would have said this. George W. Bush never would have said this. John Kerry never would have said this. This is what I mean when I write that the 2016 election isn’t simply Democrat vs. Republican, but normal vs. abnormal.
► Today from TPM — Trump lashes out again as Khan family gives new interview
ALSO at The Stand — Tax-free Trump says his taxes are ‘none of your business’ (by Leo W. Gerard)
► In the Seattle Times — Want Trump to win? Listen to Kshama Sawant (by Danny Westneat) — Seattle’s Kshama Sawant argues there’s no real difference between the two political parties — even after one of them put Donald Trump on the ballot… Ralph Nader’s conceit in 2000 was the same as Sawant’s now: that the movement they’re building is bigger than one puny presidential election. We all know how that turned out in 2000.
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► From Politico — Trade deal’s supporters counterattack — Despite the boisterous politics and candidates’ dead-on-arrival declarations, business groups have launched a well-funded, national effort to lobby their way to TPP approval. Leading supporters of TPP remain steadfastly optimistic it will be approved during the post-election lame-duck session of Congress.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — Frustration mounts over ObamaCare co-op failures — A new wave of failures is disrupting coverage for thousands and raising new questions.
NATIONAL
► From AP — Groups affiliated with Black Lives Matter release agenda — Ahead of the second anniversary of the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, that touched off a wave of protests nationwide, a coalition of more than 60 organizations affiliated with the Black Lives Matter movement has issued a list of demands calling for policing and criminal justice reforms.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.