NEWS ROUNDUP
Costs of denying paid sick leave, 7 against 732, The Noise…
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
STATE ELECTIONS
EDITOR’S NOTE — If you agree that everyone should have the opportunity to earn paid sick leave at work, vote for I-1433!
► From PBS — Debate on I-1433 (minimum wage/paid sick leave)
EDITOR’S NOTE — Watch as the WSLC’s April Sims and home healthcare worker Tamika Aden knock it out of the park on behalf of Initiative 1433.
► From The Stranger — Initiative 732 is a false promise for climate justice (by Jill Mangaliman, executive director of Got Green) — Seven reasons to vote NO on I-732:
- Urgency is not an excuse to get it wrong.
- Adding a buck to the price of gas will do nothing to reduce climate change without investing the revenue in clean, equitable communities.
- I-732’s “revenue-neutral” tax-cuts approach to carbon pricing is a step in the wrong direction and would be a devastating precedent for global climate action.
- I-732 does nothing to create a Just Transition to a cleaner economy.
- I-732 wants to be tax reform, but carbon revenues aren’t the relief we’ve been looking for.
- That’s why most people who care deeply about the climate and communities don’t support I-732.
- We can do better.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Wyman to clarify info in Spanish voter pamphlet after Dems threaten suit — The Spanish version of the voter pamphlet initially put out by Republican Kim Wyman used a broad translation for the word “felony,” one that also includes lesser offenses, such as misdemeanors. That translation could lead some Spanish-speaking voters to wrongly conclude they were ineligible to vote.
NATIONAL ELECTIONS
YESTERDAY at The Stand — Ignore the noise, it’s decision time: Want more talk, or real plans? — At a time when 24-7 campaign coverage has devolved once again into a “controversy” about emails we don’t know who wrote or what they say, the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) has released a timely new video that helps America’s working families keep their eye on the ball: real issues that affect our families and nation. The video reminds voters that Hillary Clinton has an ambitious plan to invest in infrastructure and rebuild America, while Donald Trump continues to support “right-to-work” for less.
THE NOISE
► In today’s Washington Post — FBI chief draws storm of protests on Clinton email probe — Outrage grew over FBI Director James Comey’s disclosure that the bureau has resumed its investigation of Hillary Clinton’s private email server, with Democrats and Republicans amplifying their demands that Comey and the attorney general provide a more detailed account of the probe.
EDITOR’S NOTE — You want scandal? Don’t settle for emails that may or may not have been from Hillary Clinton, and may or may not have anything to do with anything. Here’s the real deal (and it’s just one day in the life of our national disgrace, Donald Trump)…
► From CNBC — Comey opposed naming Russians, citing election timing — Some government insiders are perplexed as to why Comey would have election timing concerns with the Russian disclosure but not with the Huma Abedin email discovery disclosure.
► From The Hill — Report connects Trump organization server to Russian bank
► From Think Progress — Trump supporters share a fake image of an undocumented immigrant voting, scream voter fraud — On the contrary: this is what voter intimidation looks like.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Still prefer your scandals to be email-related? Try this one on for size…
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Washington Post — Administration defends labor-law executive order against court decision (by Joe Davidson) — Marcia Crone, a little-known federal district court judge in Beaumont, Tex., played David to President Obama’s Goliath when she blocked most of an executive order that would allow federal agencies to deny work to federal contractors with workplace violations.
NATIONAL
► From Reuters — McDonald’s to pay $3.75 million in 1st settlement with franchise workers — McDonald’s has agreed to pay $3.75 million to settle a lawsuit claiming it was liable for labor law violations by a California franchisee, marking what lawyers said was the first time the company has settled legal claims by a group of U.S. workers at one of its franchises.
► From Huffington Post — Thousands of Philadelphia transit workers go on strike — Public transportation workers in Philadelphia went on strike at midnight on Monday after they were unable to reach a contract agreement with the transit system that provides almost one million rides a day in and around the fifth largest U.S. city.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.