NEWS ROUNDUP
MAGA for felons ● IUOE strike ● Pay our teachers! ● Shea vs. media
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
ARE WE GREAT AGAIN YET?
► In today’s Washington Post — Manafort convicted on 8 counts — A jury found former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort guilty Tuesday on tax- and bank-fraud charges. His possible prison sentence wasn’t immediately clear, but legal experts said he is likely to face about seven to 10 years in prison.
► In today’s NY Times — What the Paul Manafort verdict means (by Noah Bookbinder, Barry Berke and Norman Eisen) — It’s Robert Mueller’s biggest victory yet, in one of the most successful special counsel investigations in history.
► In today’s Washington Post — After two convictions, pressure mounts on Trump — No day during President Trump’s 19 months in office could prove as dangerous or debilitating as Tuesday. The day’s convictions could send two people who have had close relationships with Trump to prison for several years, while one of them brought the investigation to the doorstep of the White House.
► In today’s NY Times — All the president’s crooks (editorial) — Trump’s own lawyer has now accused him, under oath, of committing a felony. Only a complete fantasist — that is, only President Trump and his cult — could continue to claim that this investigation of foreign subversion of an American election, which has already yielded dozens of other indictments and several guilty pleas, is a “hoax” or “scam” or “rigged witch hunt.”
► And some truth from The Onion — Hundreds of people exactly like Manafort, Cohen enjoy another day without any consequences whatsoever
► Meanwhile, from Capital and Main — Top Republican on tax subcommittee received yacht loan from foreign bank lobbying on 2017 tax bill — As Republicans were finalizing tax cut legislation in late 2017, a foreign-owned bank seeking to shape the bill gave a seven-figure yacht loan to a top GOP lawmaker on the committee writing the measure. Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-FL), who sits on the House Ways and Means Committee and leads its tax policy subcommittee, has been under fire in recent weeks for purchasing a yacht on the same day he voted for the GOP tax package.
► From HuffPost — The first 2 congressmen to endorse Trump have been indicted — The first two members of Congress to publicly support Donald Trump for president, Reps. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.) and Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), are now in hot water over allegations of insider trading and campaign finance violations.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — IUOE Local 302 on STRIKE in Western Washington — UPDATE: “We appreciate the public interest and support of our efforts,” said IUOE 302’s Daren Konopaski. “The dispute over this agreement is between our members and the contractors signatory to it. We have a long standing relationship with the AGC and our contractors and we are hopeful a resolution will be reached soon.”
► In the PSBJ — Strike halts work on Amazon towers in downtown Seattle
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — Union strike stops North Olympic Peninsula public works projects — An estimated $4.8 million in public works projects in Clallam and Jefferson counties came to a halt Tuesday in the first day of a strike by IUOE Local 302. Most of the impact was felt in Port Angeles and unincorporated Clallam County.
► From KIMA — Farm workers still have to pick fruit in unhealthy air conditions — The air quality is getting worse across the valley but some in our community still have to work outside in it. Local farm workers say they can’t just skip picking fruit on days when the air quality is poor because the crops will go bad.
PAY OUR TEACHERS!
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima School District employees vote to strike as pay impasse continues — Hundreds of Yakima School District employees may not be in schools when classes start on Monday. That’s because members of the Yakima Education Association, the district’s largest employee union, voted Tuesday to go on strike unless administrators offer them a better pay increase for the upcoming school year. More than 800 union members voted almost unanimously to strike for the first time in more than 25 years.
► In today’s Columbian — Washougal, Hockinson teachers vote to approve strikes
► In today’s Daily News — Longview teachers take district’s latest offer to union members
► In today’s Daily News — Kalama teachers, district report progress in contract talks
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s Seattle Times — Gov. Inslee condemns state lawmaker’s remarks calling journalists ‘dirty, godless, hateful people’ — Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday that state Rep. Matt Shea’s remarks calling journalists “those dirty, godless, hateful people” should disqualify him from the public-records task force.
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — It’s up to Republicans to hold Rep. Matt Shea accountable (March 2016) — Now that there are reports that Rep. Matt Shea aided and abetted domestic terrorists, one wonders if any Republicans in Washington state will muster the courage to call him out.
► In the PSBJ — Eight more fast-food chains agree to drop no-poaching clauses that hold down pay (subscription required) — “Businesses can’t rig the system to avoid competition,” Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson said after securing deals with 15 restaurant chains. He said he may sue others under investigation.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Cathy McMorris Rodgers schedules town hall Thursday in downtown Spokane — Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers will hold a town hall Thursday evening at the Spokane Convention Center. Tickets for the event were made available last week and had sold out as of Monday morning. The congresswoman’s office said they would let people in to the event at the doors without a ticket if there’s room. But there’s no guarantee of entry.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — NAFTA ‘handshake’ deal with Mexico targeted for Thursday — The Trump administration is planning to formally announce on Thursday that it has reached a breakthrough in NAFTA talks with Mexico, clearing the way for Canada to rejoin negotiations to modernize the free trade pact, three sources close to the talks told Politico.
► In today’s NY Times — Cost of new coal rules: Up to 1,400 more deaths a year — The Trump administration unveiled its rewrite of pollution rules for coal-fired power plants, and in the fine print is an analysis showing an increase in premature deaths.
NATIONAL
► In the St. Louis Post-Dispatch — Study: CEOs who think they’re underpaid are more likely to order layoffs to give themselves a raise — A new study, led by researchers at the Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations, finds that CEOs who are paid less than their peers are significantly more likely to order layoffs. Among firms that engaged in layoffs during the study period, the average CEO eliminated 1,200 jobs and received $600,000 in additional compensation the next year, the study found.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.