NEWS ROUNDUP
Rallying for health care, school funding, racial and social justice…
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
HEALTH CARE
► In the Seattle Times — With outrage and resolve, Seattle rally backs saving, improving Obamacare — Demanding to maintain and even expand health care for all, hundreds rallied in Westlake Park on Sunday as part of a national call to defend and improve Obamacare. U.S. Rep. Pramila Jayapal brought a roar of approval from the crowd when she said she had decided to spend the inaugural not in Washington, D.C., but in her home district, as an act of solidarity with her constituents. “The repeal of the affordable health-care act is an act of violence under the guise of politics,” she said. “We need to make it better, not repeal it.”
ALSO at The Stand — ACA repeal, Medicare vouchers threaten health care, economy (by Jeff Johnson)
► From Talking Points Memo — Top House GOPer heckled with ‘Save Our Health Care’ chants at MLK rally — The House’s fourth highest-ranking Republican was heckled during a speech at Martin Luther King Jr. Day rally by attendees protesting the GOP’s plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act. “We may not always agree with one another, but we can come together and find common ground to create change and progress right here in Eastern Washington,” Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) said before being interrupted by chants of “save our health care.” Local TV station KXLY also reported that attendees chanted “liar” at the event.
Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers has her speech drowned out by “save our healthcare” chants at the MLK Day rally and march. #Spokane pic.twitter.com/creqqXIK2I
— Brad Brown (@bdbrownie) January 16, 2017
► In today’s NY Times — Fear spurs support for health law as Republicans work to repeal it — People who benefit from the law are flooding Congress with testimonials. Angry consumers are confronting Republican lawmakers. And Democrats who saw the law as a political liability in recent elections have suddenly found their voice, proudly defending the law now that it is in trouble.
► In today’s NY Times — GOP’s health care death spiral (by J.B. Silvers) — From my point of view as a former health insurance company chief executive, “total disaster” would also describe any Republican repeal-and-delay plan. Although my former colleagues in the insurance industry are too cowed by the president-elect to say so, Republican insistence on repeal without having a meaningful replacement at the same time will drive most insurers out of the individual market and leave the 10 percent of Americans now covered by some aspect of the A.C.A. without coverage — especially if Medicaid expansion is rolled back as well.
► From Politico — Ryan and Trump set for Medicare showdown — House Republicans are praying the president-elect comes around to their plans for converting Medicare into a (privatized) voucher program. Tax reform could be in trouble if he doesn’t.
THIS WASHINGTON
MORE coverage in the (Everett) Herald, Seattle Times, and the Spokesman-Review.
► In today’s News Tribune — Lawmakers debate whether to spare school districts from ‘levy cliff’ — and possible budget cuts — Democrats at the state Capitol want to delay a planned cut to school districts’ local tax authority, which threatens to reduce school districts’ budgets by millions of dollars in the 2017-18 school year. Republicans say lawmakers should focus first on a larger issue: Fixing the unconstitutional way Washington state pays for schools.
► From Huffington Post — Dr. King, labor leader (by AFSCME President Lee Saunders) — This Martin Luther King Day, we must be more vigilant than ever as guardians of his dream. We must not only promote diversity and racial progress, commit to serving others and heed his call for non-violent collective action. We must also meet the challenge of economic inequality and defend the labor rights that were a pillar of Dr. King’s work. We must do more to empower working families and expand opportunity for people of all races.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — ‘The arc of the moral universe is long, but bends towards justice’ (by Jeff Johnson)
MORE MLK Day rally and march coverage in the Spokesman-Review and the Yakima H-R.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — State approves Kaiser acquisition of Group Health — Washington state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler has approved Kaiser Permanente’s $1.8 billion acquisition of Group Health Cooperative. The deal for what will become Kaiser Permanente of Washington is expected to close on Feb. 1.
► In the Spokesman-Review — An uncertain, and sometimes grim, future awaits Washington’s aging Hispanic farmworkers — Studies show that Hispanic farmworkers are likely to be injured on the job, and as they age, suffer from overuse injuries and long-term illnesses linked to working in the fields. But few of those who are in the United States legally have investments for retirement and most face looming medical costs. Undocumented workers who are aging out of the workforce have even fewer options.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Trump expected to meet again with Boeing CEO over Air Force One — Trump shook the defense industry — and put all large U.S. companies with government contracts on notice — when he tweeted Dec. 6 that “Boeing is building a brand new 747 Air Force One for future presidents, but costs are out of control, more than $4 billion. Cancel order!”
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Bloomberg — Democrats want to revive Obama’s overtime rule state by state — Democrats in Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maryland, Wisconsin and Michigan said they plan to introduce bills modeled on Obama’s reform, which would have made millions more white-collar workers eligible for overtime. More are likely to follow.
► In the Seattle Times — Patty Murray, Maria Cantwell criticized for vote to block prescription drugs from Canada — Washington’s U.S. senators face questions and criticism about their votes against a proposal by Bernie Sanders aimed at making it easier to import inexpensive prescription drugs from Canada.
► From CNN — Sources: Trump labor pick Andrew Puzder has voiced second thoughts about nomination — President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to be labor secretary has voiced second thoughts in recent days, because of a relentless barrage of criticism from Democrats, labor unions and other liberal groups, a business ally and GOP sources tell CNN.
► In today’s Washington Post — New feds could be fired for ‘no cause at all’ by Trump under planned legislation (by Joe Davidson) — Feds should put on their body armor now. A range of Republican proposals on federal hiring, firing and retiring will have them under fire during the Trump administration. One flying under the radar poses a fundamental threat to the purpose of the civil service. It would essentially dispose of federal employee due process rights.
► In today’s Washington Post — Poll: Trump will take office as least popular president in at least four decades — President-elect Donald Trump also drew low marks for his response to Russian hacking, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.
► From KNKX — Bill to restrict highly skilled foreign workers could affect Washington tech companies — Critics of the H1-B via program say that many of the immigrants who come to the U.S. on the program are brought in as cheap labor to replace American workers. Now, a lawmaker from California has introduced a bill that would further restrict the number of visas given out each year.
NATIONAL
► From USA Today — Unions appeal DOT approval of Norwegian Air — Unions representing 100,000 aviation workers have asked a federal appeals court to overturn the Transportation Department’s decision allowing Norwegian Air International to fly to and from the U.S. The case filed Thursday at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, which hears appeals of administration decisions, means the long-running dispute with Norwegian will continue a while longer.
► In today’s NY Times — 2 years, 31 dead construction workers. New York can do better. (by Dominique Bravo) — Poor immigrant workers are falling off our buildings and being crushed to death in our streets.
► In the Seattle Times — Economic powerhouses squeeze shoppers, workers (by Jon Talton) — Big companies and cartels may have more to do with holding down wages and opportunities for working people than we realize. Welcome to the world of monopsony. Like monopoly, it’s bad for the economy.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.