NEWS ROUNDUP
Bad budget, Boeing layoffs are all local, dumber by watching…
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — Senate Republican budget plan short-changes state employees (WSLC Legislative Update) — Senate Republicans are short-changing state employees because they refuse to clean up the state’s tax code. They refuse to close the tax break on capital gains or close other unnecessary, ineffective tax loopholes. Instead they express open disdain for the state’s collective bargaining laws and, lacking the numbers or support for changing those laws, essentially ignore them by arbitrarily proposing different terms and conditions of state workers’ employment. That’s not how this works.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Family and parental leave policies are new front for labor supporters — Employee advocates on both the city and state levels say family and parental leave is a next top priority, with some business groups saying they want to avoid a patchwork of local measures. In the Legislature, there are two competing bills, one introduced by Rep. June Robinson (D-Everett) and the other by Sen. Joe Fain (R-Auburn). Negotiations are beginning now to try to reach agreement, perhaps somewhere in the middle, as well as to gather input on areas not covered by the bills.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — ‘Real ID’ deadline looms: Proposed fix would leave Washington with two-tiered license — When federal identification standards take effect for air travel in January, Washington residents, like others across the country, will need an enhanced driver’s license or a passport to board a domestic flight. That could be a problem if Washington doesn’t soon comply with federal standards.
TRUMPCARE
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Call Congress: Don’t take away health care!
► From The Hill — Poll: Approval wanes for Trumpcare — Support for the GOP proposal to repeal and replace the ACA is fading, declining from 46 percent last week to 41 percent in the new poll.
EDITOR’S NOTE — “Earth to Cathy. Earth to Cathy. Come in, Cathy.”
► From The Hill — Trump, GOP struggle to find healthcare votes — House Republican leaders on Tuesday struggled to pick up votes for their ObamaCare repeal-and-replace bill, even after President Trump visited Capitol Hill to sell the plan. With only a day before a scheduled vote on the House floor, the White House and Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) are facing an uphill fight to get the majority — 216 votes — needed to clear the lower chamber.
► From Huffington Post — Republican opposition to Trumpcare cracks open door to negotiations — Faced with the increasingly clear reality that House conservatives will vote down the Republican health care bill, GOP leaders may be moving toward reopening negotiations on their Affordable Care Act rewrite. Or Republicans may be moving closer to an embarrassing floor defeat.
► From Politico — Trumpcare DOA in the Senate — Forget the House GOP’s troubles passing a health care bill. The party’s bigger problem looms in the Senate.
BOEING
► In yesterday’s (Everett) Herald — Boeing plans to lay off 170 workers in region — Boeing announced more layoffs and a new round of buyouts late last week for workers around Puget Sound. The company continues to trim its workforce [in Washington] as it cuts costs to make good on promises to boost profits and payouts for shareholders.
ALSO at The Stand — Hold Boeing accountable for state tax breaks — Since receiving a multi-billion dollar extension of its special tax breaks in 2013, instead of increasing employment in the state as our Legislature intended and the public expected, Boeing has cut 12,259 jobs in Washington — almost 7,400 in the past year alone — with more cuts planned later this year. And yet the company continues to receive its full tax incentive.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Immigrants need experts, not con artists (editorial) — A court ruling against a Tacoma-area businessman, or notario, who gave bad advice to immigrants couldn’t come at a better time. President Trump’s deportation orders will only drive more desperate people underground for help — and in many cases, straight into the arms of incompetent notarios.
TREASON
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Acosta cut deal with billionaire guilty in sex abuse case — Trump is on the witness list in a Florida court battle over how federal prosecutors handled allegations that Jeffrey Epstein, a billionaire money manager who loved to party, sexually abused more than 40 minor girls, most of them between the ages of 13 and 17. The lawsuit questions why Trump’s nominee for labor secretary, former Miami U.S. attorney Alexander Acosta, cut a non-prosecution deal with Epstein a decade ago rather than pursuing a federal indictment that Acosta’s staff had advocated.
► In today’s NY Times — After failed cabinet bid, Puzder leaves restaurant post — Andrew F. Puzder, who withdrew his nomination as labor secretary, has now resigned as head of the company that owns the Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s chains.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Baltimore Sun — Baltimore City Council passes $15 minimum wage bill — The council voted overwhelmingly Monday to raise the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022. With the 11-3 vote, council members brushed aside the mayor’s fiscal warnings and joined more affluent cities such as Seattle, San Francisco and Washington, which have passed similar measures.
► In today’s Washington Post — Ex-Colo. GOP leader said only Democrats committed voter fraud. Now he’s charged with voter fraud.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
We always assumed there was a goal behind it all: cattle cars, race war, autocracy. But those were last century’s versions of tyranny. It would make perfect sense if modern America’s contribution to the genre were far dumber. Trump in the White House may just be a monkey clutching history’s biggest hand grenade. Yes, he’s always one step ahead of us, and more dangerous than any smart person, and we can never for a minute take our eyes off him.
But while we keep looking for his hidden agenda, it’s our growing addiction to the spectacle of his car-wreck presidency that is the real threat. He is already making idiots and accomplices of us all, bringing out the worst in each of us, making us dumber just by watching. Even if Trump never learns to govern, after four years of this we will forget what civilization ever looked like – and it will be programming, not policy, that will have changed the world.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.