NEWS ROUNDUP
McCleary trouble, Spokane is hiring, Trump’s alt-reality
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
LOCAL
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Millennium gets permit after appeals deadline passes unchallenged — Cowlitz County officials say the time has passed to file formal challenges of a massive environmental study of the Longview coal terminal. The 11,000-page environmental impact statement written by the state and county drew a record number of public comments from both sides of the coal debate. But, in a big surprise, the county said a deadline for appealing the EIS expired quietly Friday afternoon with no formal challenges from either side.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Remember back in 2016, when the corporate-backed Washington Research Council warned us that if the I-1433 minimum wage increase was approved,”businesses in cities along the state’s borders may be particularly affected. In Idaho, the minimum wage is just $7.25.” Good times. Good times.
SPEAKER’S VISIT
► And speaking of Paul’s plan, from HuffPost — Tax reform could help the working class. Republicans don’t seem interested. (by Arthur Delaney) — The tax code offers powerful tool for boosting wages, which Republicans and Democrats have expanded in the past. But this year, Republicans just want to repeal taxes on large inheritances, cut the number of tax brackets, and reduce tax rates for businesses.
► From Politico — Ryan faces heat back home in Wisconsin — While the town hall was carefully choreographed, packed with about 300 well-behaved attendees, interviews with constituents who have voted for Ryan showed many were disquieted by the GOP’s failure to deliver on key campaign promises. Ryan blamed the Senate, as he’s done before.
THAT WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand:
No more trickle-down ‘free trade’ deals (by Leo W. Gerard)
NAFTA 2.0: Take action to make it work for working people
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump threatens shutdown, suggests controversial pardon at Arizona rally — President Trump on Tuesday threatened to shut down the government over border wall funding, said the North American Free Trade Agreement is likely to be terminated and signaled that he was prepared to pardon former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio, who is anathema to the Latino community.
► In the Washington Post — The strange story of that ‘Blacks for Trump’ guy standing behind POTUS at his Phoenix rally — He’s a radical fringe activist from Miami once belonged to a violent black supremacist religious cult, and he runs a handful of amateur, unintelligible conspiracy websites. He has called Barack Obama “The Beast” and Hillary Clinton a Ku Klux Klan member. Oprah Winfrey, he says, is the devil.
EDITOR’S NOTE — “Look at my African American over here!”
► In today’s Washington Post — As Trump ranted and rambled in Phoenix, his crowd slowly thinned (by Jenna Johnson) — In a speech that would drag on for 75 minutes, the president launched into one angry rant after another.
► From The Hill — Poll: Trump job approval hits new low in wake of Charlottesville comments
► In today’s NY Times — Trump-McConnell feud is so bad they are not speaking — The relationship between President Trump and Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is disintegrating, and McConnell has privately expressed uncertainty that Trump will be able to salvage his administration.
NATIONAL
► In the Detroit News — Nissan union vote was influenced — (by Gary Casteel) — Nissan employees courageously fought for a local union and came within a few hundred votes of achieving their dream. All of us were disappointed by the outcome in Canton, but we weren’t surprised. Despite Ghosn’s testimony that Nissan was neutral on the question of a union, the company waged an anti-union campaign unlike any I’ve seen.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
Trump has shown, once again, that his power to bring out the worst in people is limitless. And we should know by now that he’s never finished, never beaten. Historically, he’s most dangerous when he’s at his lowest. And he’s never been lower than now.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.