NEWS ROUNDUP
Seat at the table | Not done yet | Lockstep on GOP tax scam
Thursday, November 16, 2017
LOCAL
“The only way we can change the economic rules is by committing ourselves to independence in politics. The rules are written by the people we elect, and for nearly four decades, they have been written to ensure working people are the losers. Electing people like Teresa, Braxton and Keith ensures that we have a seat at the table.”
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Sims named to replace Mosqueda at WSLC
► In today’s Seattle Times — King County Council chairman accuses Trump administration of ‘bullying’ sanctuary jurisdictions — The Trump administration’s latest threat against sanctuary jurisdictions draws a sharp retort from Seattle and King County. “This is about bullying and intimidation,” Metropolitan King County Council Chairman Joe McDermott said.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s News Tribune — State Supreme Court says state not done yet with McCleary education order — Washington’s Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday lawmakers must do more to meet its long-running education decision known as McCleary despite billions in new state spending poured into K-12 schools by the Legislature earlier this year. As one of the last remaining tasks to meet McCleary, the court had ordered the state to take on the full cost of teacher and other school administrator salaries that have been paid for in part by local levies for years. The court agreed with the state that the remaining details of the program for full state funding of K-12 education “are in place.” Just not in time.
MORE local coverage in today’s (Everett) Herald, KUOW, Seattle Times, (Spokane) Spokesman-Review, (Vancouver) Columbian, and from the Associated Press.
► From KNKX — Women see ‘surge’ opportunity to address sexual harassment at State Capitol — In response to recent reports about sexual harassment at the state Capitol, a state Senate committee voted Tuesday night to require all senators and staff to take annual sexual harassment training.
ALSO at The Stand — #MeToo power shift must be sustained by organized labor
CORPORATE TAX GIVEAWAY
EDITOR’S NOTE — Reps. Dave Reichert (R-8th), Jamie Herrera Beutler (R-3rd), and Dan Newhouse (R-4th) have all announced they will vote “yes” on this tax giveaway to corporations and the wealthy, financed by middle-class tax increases (and our children and grandchildren). And of course, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-5th) is one of this GOP tax scam’s architects and chief cheerleaders, so she will also vote “yes.”
UPDATE (Nov. 16, 2017, 11 a.m. Pacific) — The U.S. House of Representatives voted today to approve the Republican tax plan, 227-205. Thirteen Republicans voted against the bill, and zero Democrats voted for it. All four Republicans from Washington state — Reps. Dave Reichert, Jaime Herrera Beutler, Dan Newhouse and Cathy McMorris Rodgers — voted “yes.”
► A related story in today’s Seattle Times — Poll: Democrats hold large advantage in state headed into congressional midterms — Democrats hold a 14-point advantage in a measure of generic voter intent, which means the poll didn’t test specific candidates but asked about which party voters are likely to favor, according to the poll by Stuart Elway. He notes the gap is exceptionally broad.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Dems say GOP tax plan doesn’t add up for everyone — Rep. Suzan DelBene’s amendments to restore deductions, which the bill does away with, were rejected.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — This accused pedophile was reportedly banned from the mall. How is it that anyone is still considering this creep to serve as a United States Senator?
► From HuffPost — Donald Trump conspicuously silent on Roy Moore
EDITOR’S NOTE — Ah.
► From AP — Franken apologizes after radio anchor says he forcibly kissed her
► In the People’s World — Sen. Sherrod Brown: White House “chaos” may sink new NAFTA — White House chaos may prevent the GOP Trump administration from negotiating a “new NAFTA” to replace the controversial jobs-destroying U.S.-Canada-Mexico “free trade” pact, says Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio). He made that prediction in a Nov. 14 conference call with thousands of CWA leaders and activists nationwide. President Trump and congressional Republican leaders still seek a new NAFTA by the end of this year, but the last round of talks, in Alexandria, Va., ended in some discord.
► From Reuters — U.S. consumer agency head Cordray to leave by end of month — The head of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Richard Cordray, will resign at the end of the month, paving the way for President Donald Trump to appoint his own director and reshape an agency that has been a scourge of Wall Street.
► From NBC News — Koch Brothers key to funding assault on campaign finance regulation — Billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch are well-known for pumping tens of millions of dollars into so-called dark money nonprofits — groups that actively promote or criticize candidates for office but are not required to reveal their donors.
NATIONAL
► From The Street — Nike shareholders to propose tax principles after Paradise Papers leak — In the wake of the Paradise Papers revelations about tax avoidance, the AFL-CIO and Domini Impact Investments LLC, a provider of socially responsible mutual funds, is asking Nike Inc. to adopt formal tax practice principles.
► From In These Times — Fight for $15 just scored a big win in Maryland. We have unions to thank. — A law establishing a $15-an-hour minimum wage in Maryland’s Montgomery County was signed into law Monday, representing a comeback win after a similar measure was defeated by pro-business Democrats just ten months ago.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.