NEWS ROUNDUP
What will it take, Styx vs. ST3, H-1B peanuts, legally locked-up…
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
COUNTDOWN TO IMPEACHMENT
► From Huffington Post — Trump says he has the right to share info with the Russians — Trump on Tuesday all but admitted that he revealed “highly classified” information while meeting with Russian officials last week, contradicting his administration’s earlier attempts to deny the story. Early Tuesday morning, Trump proclaimed that he has “the absolute right” to share any information he wants.
► From The Hill — European official: Country might stop sharing intel with U.S. — A European intelligence official is reportedly warning that his country may stop sharing information with the U.S. after reports that President Trump revealed highly classified intel to Russian officials. The official said sharing information “could be a risk for our sources.”
► From Huffington Post — This is how Republicans treated Hillary Clinton when she was accused of mishandling sensitive information — House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) was one of Clinton’s biggest critics, tweeting at least once a month from July to November about what he called “reckless” and “downright dangerous” actions. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said Clinton was “disqualified” from being president for her emails. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) suggested Clinton’s actions could have been worthy of jail time.
I don’t feel an iota of sympathy for Pence. He was among a perfidious group of political opportunists who pushed Trump’s candidacy while having to know that he was intellectually, temperamentally and morally unfit for the presidency. They stuck with him as he mocked the disabled, belittled women, insulted Hispanics, libeled Mexicans and promiscuously promised the impossible and ridiculous — all that “Day One” nonsense like how the wall would be built and Mexico would pay for it…
From most of the Republican Party comes not a whisper of rebuke. The congressional leadership is inert, cowed, scurrying to the White House for this or that ceremonial picture, like members of the erstwhile Politburo flanking Stalin atop Lenin’s mausoleum. They are appalled, but mute…
America is already worse off for Trump’s presidency. He was elected to make America great again, but his future is more like other nations’ sordid past. His own party has been sullenly complicit, showing how little esteem many politicians place in our most cherished values, not the least of them honesty and dignity. For all of them, an accounting is coming.
EDITOR’S NOTE:
Dear Republican Reps. Jaime Herrera Beutler, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Dan Newhouse and Dave Reichert,
What will it take?
Sincerely,
The Entire Staff of The Stand
THIS WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — As the clock winds down on the second overtime special legislative session that all of us are paying for, Senate Republicans are still refusing to meet with Democrats to begin negotiations on a biennial budget that would end the session. So they have plenty of time for holding partisan political hearings.
LOCAL
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Nippon in ‘recovery’, some employees to be furloughed — Production at Nippon Dynawave’s Longview paper packaging mill is picking up again as the company slowly gets its wastewater treatment plant working properly. Still, while some employees are returning to work another 85 face brief layoffs later this week, according to AWPPW Local 633.
► From MarketWatch — Boeing picks St. Louis for potential jet plant — Boeing Co. said Monday it would assemble new U.S. Air Force trainer jets at its main military aircraft facilities in Missouri if it wins a three-way contest for a program estimated by analysts to be worth around $16 billion. The move sets up the St. Louis plant in competition with facilities in Alabama and South Carolina run or planned by Boeing’s rivals in bidding to build an initial 350 T-X jets.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s NY Times — Trump’s fraudulent voter-fraud commission (editorial) — The president’s new commission is based on a myth, and is crafted to cover up for his own lies about the election.
► In the Houston Chronicle — Trump’s trade policy is unlikely to deliver big wins for U.S. workers (by Greg Wright) — As an economist studying international trade, I’m skeptical that incremental, bilateral negotiations will reap significant rewards for American workers, particularly the kind Trump has promised.
► From Huffington Post — GOP lawmaker asks why men pay for maternity care. Woman’s reply is gold. — A GOP congressman asked why men should have to pay for maternity care, and this woman’s response is now resonating across the country: “Why should I pay for a flower I won’t smell, a park I don’t visit, or art I can’t appreciate? Why should I pay the salaries of politicians I didn’t vote for, a tax cut that doesn’t affect me, or a loophole I can’t take advantage of?”
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — These 25 men made $11 billion, despite modest returns — Outsize paydays for hedge funds come at a turning point for the industry, where even managers who had a tough year were able to cash in. B
► In today’s NY Times — Health insurers bilked Medicare, a whistle-blower says — A former executive at UnitedHealth says he was paid bonuses to make patients look sicker than they were, which led to bigger reimbursements.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
“I tried to get a better life for my wife and my son, and it backfired,” said Bollinger, who is 53. “Now I’m in my mid-50s, and I’m ruined.” Bollinger had signed a noncompete agreement, designed to prevent him from leaving his previous employer for a competitor. These contracts have long been routine among senior executives. But they are rapidly spreading to employees like Bollinger, who do the kind of blue-collar work that President Trump has promised to create more of.
► In today’s NY Times — Agreements that lock up workers, legally (editorial) — Contracts barring even low-paid employees from leaving for a competing company hurt the economy and workers.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.