NEWS ROUNDUP
Pierce Co. deputy killed | Big agenda, but realistic | Oprah’s ‘new day’
Monday, January 8, 2018
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — As Alaska Air cuts costs, employee discontent grows and passenger loyalty is at risk — Amid a constant push for cost cutting, a challenging merger at Alaska Airlines and operational turmoil at Horizon Air, many Alaska Air pilots and cabin crew are deeply dissatisfied. Facing stiff competition from Delta, Alaska’s winning reputation for customer service is at risk.
► In the Spokesman-Review — Paul Ryan-backed super PAC supporting Cathy McMorris Rodgers in 2018 contest — National Republicans plan to throw a counterpunch in Washington’s 5th Congressional District, which has become a midterm bull’s-eye for energized Democrats.
LEGISLATIVE SESSION BEGINS
ALSO at The Stand — Pro-worker bills will be heard in new Senate (WSLC Legislative Update)
‘Important progress can be made’ in 2018 (WSLC announces 2018 Shared Prosperity Agenda)
ALSO at The Stand — Senate GOP’s brinkmanship suspends construction, kills jobs (by Sen. Bob Hasegawa, July 24, 2017)
► In the Seattle Times — Two Seattle-area Democrats in new leadership roles as Legislature readies to convene — With Democrats in control of the state Senate, Sen. Sharon Nelson of Maury Island and Sen. Christine Rolfes of Bainbridge Island will help chart a course for the 60-day legislative session that begins Monday.
MORE local legislative previews in the (Aberdeen) Daily World, Columbia Basin Herald, Kitsap Sun, (Longview) Daily News, News Tribune/Olympian, Northwest News Network, Peninsula Daily News, Spokesman-Review, (Vancouver) Columbian, Nyah
ALSO the editorial boards weigh in with their advice on what lawmakers should do in the Columbian, (Everett) Herald, Olympian, Seattle Times, and the Yakima Herald-Republic.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Quick action planned on bills to boost voting
► In the Spokesman-Review — Washington seeking ways to get more voters registered and casting ballots
► In the Olympian — Modest car tab relief should be a priority in Olympia (editorial) — With a fair wind at their backs, some Democrats might feel unmotivated to spend precious time in a 60-day session on Sound Transit reform; they might be ready to throw unconditional support to the regional transit agency, ensuring business as usual. That would be a mistake.
► In The Stranger — Wow, I’m so glad Democrats took back the State Senate so they could waste more time f—ing over Sound Transit (by Heidi Groover) — Some transit advocates see it as a strategy to avoid a coalition of Republicans and suburban Democrats taking an even bigger chunk out of Sound Transit. Others are pissed. Robert Cruickshank writes: “Democrats in Olympia are convinced they are just a few steps ahead of an angry pack of anti-tax wolves ready to destroy their majority. There is no evidence in 2018 that this fear is justified.”
► In the Seattle Times — Republicans’ yellow brick road always leads to bashing Seattle (by Danny Westneat) — Local Republicans released their plan for getting out of the political wilderness in 2018. It sounds awfully similar to what hasn’t worked for them in this state in decades: Attack Seattle. Seriously, GOP: I’m sure Seattle-mocking gets a few laughs over at party headquarters in the distant land of… Bellevue. But news flash: It doesn’t work. It’s also worth noting that when Seattle-ish policy ideas do get on the ballot statewide, they often pass.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — 200,000 Salvadorans may be forced to leave as Trump ends immigration protection — The Trump administration has canceled the Temporary Protected Status permits of about 200,000 Salvadorans who have lived in the country since at least 2001, leaving them vulnerable to deportation. The administration will notify the Salvadorans they have until Sept. 9, 2019, to leave the United States or find a new way to obtain legal residency.
► In today’s Washington Post — The dam of denial has broken (by E.J. Dionne) — The most astonishing aspect of the response to Michael Wolff’s book is that anyone is surprised. President Trump’s unfitness for office was obvious long before he was elected. Once he moved into the White House, the destructive chaos of his administration was there for all to see. Future historians will scratch their heads to figure out why it took this particular book to break the dam of denial.
NATIONAL
► In the NY Times — From Mexico to the U.S., a NAFTA tale of two truckers — Restricted from operating in the United States, most Mexican drivers must hand off their cargo. The Trump administration wants even tighter controls.
I.C.Y.M.I.
► Last night at the Golden Globes Awards, Oprah Winfrey accepted the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement. She delivered a stirring speech that paid homage to the press and to victims of sexual abuse and harassment, saying, “I want all the girls watching here and now to know that a new day is on the horizon.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.