NEWS ROUNDUP
Trumpcare abomination, UFCW yes, Adele 29…
Friday, May 5, 2017
TRUMPCARE
► In today’s Washington Post — House Republicans claim a major victory with passage of health-care overhaul — Under intense pressure to show they can govern and to make good on their promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, Republicans pushed through the bill after adopting a last-minute change that earned it just enough votes to pass. However, the House version fell significantly short of the GOP’s long-held goals, making major dents in large portions of the current law but not outright repealing it. The bumpy, months-long process that led to Thursday’s vote also violated some of the GOP’s own promises on how they would govern.
ALSO at The Stand — Flying blind, Republicans pass Trumpcare — Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the six-term Republican representing Spokane and the 5th Congressional District, was the only member of Washington’s delegation who voted “yes.
► From AP — GOP health care bill lets employers cap benefits — The Republican health care plan would allow health insurance companies to impose lifetime and annual caps on benefits for those who get coverage through a large-employer plan. Former President Obama’s health care overhaul banned insurers from imposing such caps, and public opinion surveys have shown that prohibition was popular.
► In today’s NY Times — In rare unity, hospitals, doctors and insurers criticize bill
► In today’s Columbian — Herrera Beutler votes against GOP’s health bill
► In today’s Seattle Times — Reichert votes ‘no’ on GOP health-care bill
► In today’s News Tribune — Reichert rises to big challenge on Obamacare rollback (editorial) — Kudos to U.S Rep. Dave Reichert, R-Auburn, for voting against the flawed Obamacare repeal that passed the U.S. House Thursday. Only 20 of the House’s 237 Republicans had the guts to do so.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Newhouse absent on health care vote; local health care providers oppose steep Medicaid cuts
► In the New Yorker — The House GOP’s shameful health care victory (by John Cassidy) — In short, the bill the House just passed is one of the most regressive pieces of legislation in living memory. When Republicans cut taxes on the rich and slash funding for programs aimed at the poor, they usually go to great lengths to argue that the two things are unconnected. But in this instance they have done away with the subterfuge. It’s reverse Robin Hood, in plain view.
► In the Washington Post — Every Republican who voted for this abomination must be held accountable (by Paul Waldman) — The health-care bill is not just wrong, or misguided, or problematic or foolish. It is an abomination. If there has been a piece of legislation in our lifetimes that boiled over with as much malice and indifference to human suffering, I can’t recall what it might have been.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s News Tribune — State employees will get to take vacation days right away — A new state law Gov. Jay Inslee approved Thursday snaps an old rule that stopped workers from taking vacation time in their first six months on the job. Now, as long as you’ve accrued time off, you can take it.
ALSO at The Stand — Amid Boeing job cuts, legislators eye tax break accountability
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — You, too, can form a union and improve your wages and working conditions. Find out how.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — When it comes to food banks, Postal Service delivers (by Julie Muhlstein) — Circle May 13 on your calendar. Put a bag of food out that morning for pickup by your mail carrier. In helping your neighbors, you’ll be part of a 25-year tradition. Twenty-five years ago, the National Association of Letter Carriers launched a charity effort that spread across the country. Since its start in 1993, the Letter Carriers’ Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive has become the largest food-gathering event here and across the country.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Forbes — Senate kills state-sponsored retirement plans for private sector workers — In a narrow 50-49 vote, the Senate by resolution killed an Obama-era rule that greenlighted state-sponsored auto-IRA retirement programs for small business workers. The AARP cried foul and urged a “no” (don’t repeal the rule) vote because: “Too many small business employees don’t have a way to save for retirement out of their regular paycheck.” That’s 55 million workers.
NATIONAL
► From AP — U.S. jobs report points to a healthy drop in underemployment — A burst of hiring in April provided a reassuring sign for the U.S. economy, reducing unemployment and bringing a broader gauge of the job market’s health to its lowest level since the recession began nearly a decade ago. Employers added 211,000 jobs, more than double the weak showing in March as the unemployment rate dipped to 4.4 percent, a 10-year low, from 4.5 percent in March.
► From Bloomberg — NLRB rule to speed up union elections shows mixed results — The NLRB’s “quickie” election rule has sped up workplace unionization drives, but it’s not necessarily giving unions an unfair advantage, as some predicted.
T.G.I.F.
► Happy 29th birthday to Adele Laurie Blue Adkins! Although The Entire Staff of The Stand has always appreciated her powerful voice, we weren’t always enthusiastic fans of the best-selling recording artist of our time. But then we saw her 2011 concert DVD Live at the Royal Albert Hall. It wasn’t just Adele’s inspired performance than won us over, it was her funny and profane chatter between songs. She is truly giddy to be performing at this legendary venue in her hometown. She calls out friends in the audience. She reveals intimate personal stories that inspired her songs. And she does so conversationally — expletives and all — coming across as genuine, honest, flawed, personable… and normal. Here’s one of the songs from that performance, but we recommend you watch the whole DVD. Enjoy!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.