NEWS ROUNDUP
Trumpcare vote next week, slavery in Tacoma, stop the giveaways
Thursday, September 21, 2017
TRUMPCARE
► From The Hill — Senate GOP aims to vote next week on Trumpcare
► From The Hill — GOP takes heavy fire over pre-existing conditions — The Republicans’ new Graham-Cassidy bill would let states repeal protections for people with pre-existing conditions.
► From The Hill — AARP: Older Americans to pay $16K more under new GOP repeal
► From CNBC — American Medical Association opposes Obamacare repeal bill, citing coverage losses by millions of Americans — The nation’s largest group of doctors opposes the Graham-Cassidy bill to repeal and replace much of Obamacare. Other groups of patients, providers and senior Americans also are against the bill.
► In today’s NY Times — Insurers come out swinging against new Republican health care bill — The health insurance industry, after cautiously watching Republican health care efforts for months, came out forcefully on Wednesday against the Senate’s latest bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act, suggesting that its state-by-state block grants could create health care chaos in the short term and a Balkanized, uncertain insurance market.
EDITOR’S NOTE — So, wait. This is opposed by the doctors, hospitals, senior citizens, every patient advocacy group there is, and even the insurance companies?! So who exactly wants this horrible, cruel bill?
EDITOR’S NOTE — Oh. Fun Fact: Deason made his fortune by pioneering the offshoring of office jobs to places outside of the United States. #MAGA!
► From Vox — GOP senators are rushing to pass Graham-Cassidy. We asked 9 to explain what it does. — Republican senators are struggling to articulate why they are rushing to pass their health care bill before the Sept. 30 deadline. “If we do nothing, it has a tremendous impact on the 2018 elections,” said Sen. Pat Roberts (R-KS). “And whether or not Republicans still maintain control and we have the gavel…
► From HuffPost — Livid Kimmel turns up the heat on Sen. Cassidy for a 2nd night — After Kimmel criticized his bill two nights ago, Cassidy countered that the talk-show host didn’t grasp the nuances of his legislation. “I am sorry he does not understand.” Last night, Kimmel responded, “Could it be, Sen. Cassidy, that the problem is that I do understand and you got caught with your G-O-Penis out. Is that possible?”
► From Politico — Kimmel, not Cassidy, is right on health care, analysts say — In the war of words between Jimmy Kimmel and Sen. Bill Cassidy, the late-night host has the better grasp of health policy, health care analysts say.
IMMIGRATION
ALSO at The Stand — DREAM nurse speaks out to save DACA
► From Bloomberg — Unions are training hotel workers to face down immigration raids — Hotel workers in cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York have been gathering for training sessions organized by the UNITE HERE union on how to handle visits from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
► From The Hill — Liberal unrest threatens Dem immigration strategy — Democratic leaders fighting to enact the DREAM Act this year are taking fire from a surprising group: liberal immigrant-rights activists… The episodes suggest the coming debate over immigration reform — a perennial headache for Republican leaders — will also be no small challenge for the Democrats.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From AP — Revenue forecast for Washington state up $288 million — Numbers released Wednesday by the Office of Financial Management show the state’s revenue collection will be up, partly because the state’s economy performed better than expected in June.
EDITOR’S NOTE –You’ll recall that Braun and his fellow Senate Republicans brought the state to the brink of a government shutdown as they demanded — and succeeded in getting — higher property taxes in King County and other populous areas of the state, so that rural (read: Republican) parts of the state would get more money for schools without having to pay for it. So now he’s a hero for swooping in and trying to mitigate the tax increases he demanded?!
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Sultan Mayor Carolyn Eslick appointed to state House seat — She will fill the 39th District vacancy created by the August resignation of Republican John Koster.
LOCAL
► In the News Tribune — Hospital lawsuit points to larger problems (letter) — Re: “State sues Tacoma’s St. Joseph Medical Center, saying it illegally withheld charity care,” (TNT, 9/5). If the allegations are correct, this is a violation of Washington’s Consumer Protection Act, which requires hospitals to provide notice of charity care availability and to screen patients for eligibility. If we cannot trust a Catholic nonprofit health organization to care for those who are unable to afford health care, who can we trust?
► In today’s Columbian — Washougal teachers ratify new contract — The Washougal teachers union ratified a new contract for the 2017-2018 school year after taking a vote Wednesday night.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s NY Times — Tax cuts for the rich by another name (editorial) — Republicans on the Senate Budget Committee violated their supposedly sacrosanct principles of fiscal hawkishness this week, by saying that it would be just fine with them to add $1.5 trillion to the deficit over 10 years in order to cut taxes. They justify this hypocrisy by asserting what has been disproved time and again — that tax cuts spur the economy and compensate for any lost revenue. In fact, these cuts could hurt the very people they purport to help — small-business owners, middle-class professionals and working-class Americans.
► In today’s Washington Post — Manafort offered ‘private briefings’ on 2016 race to Putin ally — Less than two weeks before Donald Trump accepted the GOP nomination, Paul Manaford, his campaign chairman, made the offer in an email, according to people familiar with the discussions.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.