NEWS ROUNDUP
DACA deal near, Baumloney, how baristas may dress
Thursday, September 14, 2017
DEFENDING THE DREAM
► This morning from The Hill — Trump: ‘Fairly close’ to DACA deal — “We’re working on a plan — subject to getting massive border controls,” he told reporters.
► From Politico — Poll: Majority wants Congress to establish path to citizenship for DACA recipients — A new poll shows that 54 percent of voters want Congress to establish a path to citizenship for DACA recipients, and another 19 percent want Congress to allow Dreamers to stay without establishing citizenship.
EDITOR’S NOTE — King is the “right-to-work” supporter who has espoused racist, white nationalist views, tweeting that “we can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.” Earlier this week, Washington Republican Reps. Jaime Herrera Beutler and Cathy McMorris Rodgers repeatedly voted for King’s legislation to eliminate prevailing wage standards on publicly funded construction projects.
► From Politico — Moderate Republicans quietly form working group to craft immigration plan — Moderate House Republicans angling for a legislative fix to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program have quietly created an informal working group to try and craft an immigration plan that could pass Congress, according to GOP sources.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The group includes Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.)
THIS WASHINGTON
LOCAL
► From Bloomberg — Boeing to boost Dreamliner output from 12 to 14 a month
► In today’s Seattle Times — City Council President Bruce Harrell becomes Seattle’s 54th mayor; Ed Murray steps down — The city charter’s language on the transition of power ensures that Harrell won’t be mayor for long. It gives Harrell five days — until 5 p.m. Monday — to accept or decline a longer tenure. If Harrell accepts, he’ll forfeit his council seat and serve as mayor until Nov. 28, when the results of the Nov. 7 mayoral election between Jenny Durkan and Cary Moon are certified. If Harrell declines, he’ll become mayor pro tem and the council will have 20 days to choose another of its members to serve into November.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From The Hill — Trump is ‘open’ to ObamaCare fix, lawmakers say — President Trump was “open” to the idea of a bipartisan ObamaCare stabilization bill but did not make any commitments during a meeting Wednesday with a group of House lawmakers, attendees said. Trump asked whether the plan is essentially what Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.) are working on in the Senate, and lawmakers said yes.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Stop trying to kill Obamacare (editorial) — Sens. Alexander and Murray are boldly leading a bipartisan effort to make some small changes to prevent a market collapse. They have called a quick succession of hearings to gather information and build consensus for a plan that could pass Congress by the end of the month.
ALSO at The Stand — Tell Congress: NO on Trump’s ‘tax reform’
► From Politico — Trump ethics watchdog moves to allow anonymous gifts to legal defense funds — The U.S. Office of Government Ethics has quietly reversed its own internal policy prohibiting anonymous donations from lobbyists to White House staffers who have legal defense funds. The little-noticed change could help President Donald Trump’s aides raise the money they need to pay attorneys as the Russia probe expands — but raises the potential for hidden conflicts of interest or other ethics trouble.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Washington Post — ‘Leave the light on — for ICE’: Motel 6 employees reported guests to immigration officials — For immigration attorneys in the Phoenix area, the motel chain has become the site of a troubling string of immigration arrests. And according to a published report, employees at two Motel 6 locations may have been sending guest information directly to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.