NEWS ROUNDUP
I-732’s cost, GOP’s soul, local CEO’s 881% raise…
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
STATE ELECTIONS
► In the Kitsap Sun — I-732 will make Washington’s budget deficit worse (by WSLC President Jeff Johnson) — A state analysis found that the I-732 carbon tax measure will cut funding available for education, health care, and other vital services by nearly $800 million over the next six years. Our state already faces a $5 billion budget deficit and court orders to improve funding for schools and mental health. I-732 makes this situation worse.
EDITOR’S NOTE — That myopic thinking about the union of K-12 teachers in our state explains why Jami Lund of the anti-union Freedom Foundation is supporting Jones as an agent of “change.”
► In today’s Seattle Times — He told you so: Chris Vance warns GOP about what Trump has wrought (by Danny Westneat) — The local Republican Party may be heading toward an extinction event, says the one Republican who, from the beginning, foresaw the true toxicity of Donald Trump. “Trump is causing damage to my party that could last for a generation,” sums up U.S. Senate candidate and former state party chairman Chris Vance.
NATIONAL ELECTIONS
ALSO at The Stand — McMorris Rodgers’ continued support of Trump is ‘shameful’
► From TPM — Obama calls out Republicans who condemn Trump, but endorse him — At a rally in Greensboro, N.C., Obama told the crowd that Trump “says stuff that nobody would find tolerable if they were applying for a job at 7/11… And the fact that now you’ve got people saying, ‘Well, we strongly disapprove, we really disagree, we find those comments disgusting, but we’re still endorsing him, we still think he should be president,’ that doesn’t make sense to me.”
► From Politico — Labor giant SEIU pumps resources into anti-Trump effort — A poll of SEIU members showed Trump’s support among the group was 17 percent — 51 points behind Hillary Clinton. Armed with that data, the SEIU has re-doubled its paid and volunteer efforts in the campaign’s home-stretch to churn up a base wave for Clinton, unleashing its largest ever independent expenditure campaign.
► From The Hill — Senate races may turn on minimum wage, overtime — As a new report from the National Employment Law Project Action Fund makes clear, this year offers an unprecedented opportunity for low-wage workers and their allies to break the logjam in the U.S. Senate by electing champions who will lead on the issue and put a minimum wage hike within reach.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s — Poll: Job approval for Congress at 18% — Just week’s before Election Day, less than one-in-five Americans approve of the job Congress is doing, according to a new Gallup poll.
LOCAL
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Hanjin ship to call in Seattle, may take away 425 empty containers — The Hanjin Seattle will arrive at some time on Oct. 13 and unload imported cargo. Then, the Hanjin empties will be lifted onto the Seattle’s decks. It’s unclear where they will go.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Oregonian — Oregon and Washington offer top tax breaks to data centers, report finds — Washington provided tax breaks worth $57.4 million to data centers in its last fiscal year, according to a new report, which valued Oregon’s incentives at $33.7 million.
NATIONAL
► From Time — How stronger unions could fix our economy — and our politics (by ) — Of the little we’ve heard, much of this election’s economic policy discussion has focused on what can be done about our historically slow growth, rising inequality, and decreasing social mobility. But neither candidate has focused on one no-brainer solution: strengthening unions.
► From The Guardian — The way to a better work-life balance? Unions, not self-help (by Peter Fleming) — Want a heathier work-life balance? Join a union. Or better still, create your own. But steer clear of that self-help section at the airport bookshop. It pretends the ideology of work might still be tamed by individual willpower. But it can’t.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► This may not be suitable for work (unless you work at The Stand.)
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.