NEWS ROUNDUP
Sweetheart coverage, ignore math, unpopular Democrats…
Monday, March 13, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Two bills in Olympia target aerospace tax credit ‘accountability’ for Boeing — Lawmakers in Olympia have introduced bills to tie aerospace tax credits to recipient employment levels in Washington state. A Boeing spokesman said the company remains opposed to any effort to alter Washington’s aerospace tax incentives.
ALSO at The Stand — Hold Boeing accountable for state tax breaks
► In today’s News Tribune — Did Inslee’s campaign get ‘millions’ from state worker unions during contract negotiations? — Union groups that bargain with the state gave about $40,000 directly to Inslee’s campaign in 2016, making the maximum amount of union money that could be considered to have benefited the governor — either directly or indirectly — about $750,000. By comparison, the total spending in the governor’s race last year came in at nearly $15 million.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Reason for hope on school funding agreement (editorial) — That the Legislature was able to pull many of the state’s 295 school districts away from the “levy cliff” — and do so with substantial bipartisan agreement — should provide some confidence that lawmakers can reach a deal this year that resolves the state Supreme Court mandate to fix education funding.
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Advocates want Yakima’s don’t-ask immigration policy to become binding ordinance — Some worry the existing practice could change in the future and regard it as a safety issue. But the mayor, who voted against the proposal, called it more political than a matter of public safety.
TRUMPCARE
► In the Seattle Times — What Trumpcare might mean for Washington state — It’s an early look, but concerns are pouring in from doctors, hospitals, insurers and regulators. The plan, many say, could cost thousands of Washingtonians coverage, increase expenses for seniors, make hospital waits longer and reduce access to contraceptives.
► From TPM — No, the CBO was not ‘way, way off’ on scoring Obamacare — Budget experts say that the office’s projections of how many total people would gain coverage under Obamacare and of the average cost of health insurance premiums turned out to be quite close to the eventual reality.
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump said no Americans would lose coverage under Obamacare repeal. Paul Ryan won’t make that promise. — House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) said Sunday that he doesn’t know how many Americans would lose coverage under his proposal to revise the Affordable Care Act, which is under fire from fellow Republicans, AARP and virtually every sector of the U.S. health-care industry.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Senate Democrats prepare for battle over Trump’s border wall — and a possible shutdown — Democrats told Senate GOP leaders that they won’t accept any attempt to include funding for Trump’s proposed border wall in a spending bill necessary to keep the government open past April 28, according to a letter obtained by The Post.
► In the NY Times — New Labor nominee: Fair leader or self-serving one? — In dozens of interviews, current and former colleagues of R. Alexander Acosta are deeply split in their assessment of the nominee. Some described him as a hands-off leader who has often chosen not to inject himself into disputes, sometimes tolerating a discriminatory environment if inaction has served his interests. Others say he is a fair leader who did not let his conservative ideals affect his decisions.
► From Huffington Post — GOP Rep. Steve King tweets in favor of white nationalism, gets little pushback from colleagues — On Sunday afternoon, King suggested that Muslim children were preventing “our civilization” from being restored… After King issued his remarks, most of his Republican congressional colleagues were conspicuously quiet.
EDITOR’S NOTE — It should come as no surprise that King is a prime sponsor of national “right-to-work” legislation, which has its roots in racism.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.