DAILY NEWS
1433 endorsed, Hillary pained, voters’ options limited…
Monday, October 17, 2016
STATE ELECTIONS
ALSO at The Stand — YES on 1433: Good for workers and the economy (by Jeff Johnson)
► In the Seattle Times —Measure to lift minimum wage to $13.50 statewide has Washington divided — Initiative 1433 would raise the minimum wage across Washington state to $13.50 over four years and require paid sick leave starting in 2018. Advocates say it’s necessary; opponents say it’s unaffordable.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Is Sound Transit 3 the $54 billion answer to our congestion? — The 15 or 16 minutes it would take to read this article five times is about what commuters spend creeping from the King-Snohomish county line to Lynnwood’s off-ramps. And that’s just a few interstate exits. If drivers are heading to Everett, Marysville or points north, it often gets nastier. (And no less tedious.) The problem is big, and so is the solution proposed by Sound Transit.
ALSO at The Stand — Approve ST3 to invest in jobs, our future (by Jeff Johnson)
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sanders visits Seattle, boosting Jayapal, urging ‘morality’ in politics — An out but not down U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders rallied supporters of Democratic congressional candidate Pramila Jayapal and took swipes at Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in a fiery get-out-the-vote speech in downtown Seattle on Saturday night.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Cathy McMorris Rodgers tepidly allies with Trump — “The reason I’m supporting Donald Trump, is he’s going to challenge the status quo,” McMorris Rodgers said. “He’s going to shake it up, and that needs to happen.”
ALSO at The Stand — McMorris Rodgers’ continued support of Trump is ‘shameful’
NATIONAL ELECTION
► In the Seattle Times — Hillary Clinton in Seattle: ‘This election is incredibly painful’ — “I take absolutely no satisfaction in what is happening on the other side, with my opponent,” she said in a brief speech. “I am not at all happy about that because it hurts our country, it hurts our democracy, it sends terrible messages to so many people here at home and around the world. Damage is being done that we’re going to have to repair. Divisions are being deepened that we’re going to have to try and heal.”
► In today’s Washington Post — Inside Donald Trump’s echo chamber of conspiracies, grievances and vitriol — The Republican nominee is determined to rouse his most fervent supporters with dire warnings, gambling that igniting his army of working-class whites could do more to put him in contention than any sort of tempered appeal to undecided voters.
► Case in point, from Vox — Trump: ‘Animals representing Hillary Clinton’ firebombed GOP office in NC
► From The Hill — Republicans fear for party’s future — Many Republican are openly questioning whether the Grand Old Party is sliding into chaos, with the establishment unable to prevent a post-election shattering of its coalition.
► MUST-READ in the Seattle Times — Burning down the house (by Timothy Egan) — Here’s Trump’s lesson for young minds: If you’re rich and boorish enough, you can get away with anything. Get away with sexual assault. Get away with not paying taxes. Get away with never telling the truth. Get away flirting with treason. Get away with stiffing people who work for you, while you take yours. Get away with mocking the disabled, veterans and families of war heroes.
NATIONAL
► From AP — Minimum wage measures on the ballot in 5 states on Nov. 8 — Voters on Nov. 8 will decide ballot measures in five states that could change the minimum wage in Arizona, Colorado, Maine, South Dakota, and Washington.
► From AP — Nearly half of young adults lack retirement savings, pension — Forty-eight percent of all Americans aged 18 to 30 have zero in retirement savings and no access to a traditional pension, according to a new poll.
► In today’s NY Times — Millions of men are missing from the job market (editorial) — Many of those who have given up on employment are struggling with pain and disabilities.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► Last Week Tonight with John Oliver — “The more you look at Gary Johnson and Jill Stein the more you realize that the lack of coverage they complain about so much might have genuinely benefited them — because their key proposals start crumbling even with the slightest scrutiny.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.