NEWS ROUNDUP
Doc leads Dino ● Split happens ● Motel 6 pays up
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
STATE ELECTIONS
LAST NIGHT at The Stand — Dems gain in Washington, but how much?
► In today’s Columbian — Herrera Beutler ahead in 3rd Congressional District — With 221,270 votes counted districtwide, Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R) ended Tuesday with 52.25 percent of the vote, to Carolyn Long’s (D) 47.75 percent, a lead of 10,000 votes.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — McMorris Rodgers wins 8th term with decisive victory over Brown
► From AP — Maria Cantwell cruises to 4th term in U.S. Senate
► In today’s Seattle Times — It turned out there were two waves, not one, and our urban-rural divide just got wider (by Danny Westneat) — A blue wave hit the suburbs, while a red one hit the rural areas even stronger than usual. The result around here was a wipeout of Republicans in King County, and an ever growing urban-rural divide.
► In today’s Seattle Times — State voters reject carbon-fee initiative — Voters in Tuesday returns rejected I-1631, the proposed carbon fee initiative, which would have raised more than $1 billion annually by 2023, with spending decisions to be made by a governor-appointed board as well as the state’s utilities.
► In today’s Seattle Times — I-940, modifying law regulating police use of deadly force, passes with strong support — Tuesday’s release of ballots showed I-940 was passing by 62 percent to 38 percent statewide, with support focused in Western Washington.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Initiative to ban local soda and grocery taxes leading
► In today’s Seattle Times — Seattle’s $600 million-plus education levy OK’d by wide margin
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Spokane voters back $495 million school bond with 67% approval
NATIONAL ELECTIONS
► In today’s NY Times — Women lead parade of victories to help Democrats win House
► In today’s Washington Post — A great day for democracy (editorial) — The Democrats’ return to control over the House of Representatives is much more than a victory for one party. It is a sign of health for American democracy.
► From HuffPost — Democrats made big gains at the state level Tuesday
► From the AFL-CIO — Trumka statement on Scott Walker Defeat — AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka: “Scott Walker was a national disgrace.”
► From HuffPost — Medicaid wins big on Election Day — Voters in Idaho, Nebraska and Utah on Tuesday defied their GOP state leaders and approved ballot initiatives to expand Medicaid, which would provide access to health coverage for about 300,000 working adults.
► From the AP — Oregon voters keep first-in-nation immigrant sanctuary law
► Meanwhile, from The Onion — Georgia election worker assures black man ballot scanner supposed to sound like shredder
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing to warn 737 MAX operators of a potential instrument failure that could cause the jet to nose-dive — Following the fatal crash of a Lion Air jet in Indonesia last week, Boeing was preparing Tuesday evening to warn all airlines operating its new 737 MAX of the potential for an instrument failure that could result in the plane entering a dangerous dive.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Spokane City Council votes to require Spokane Fire Fighters, Police Officers to only work with city dispatchers — City Council President Ben Stuckart, who sponsored the ordinance, said it was designed to reassure city employees and maintain city control over dispatch services in the face of a potential region-wide communications integration.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Kitsap Transit launching Kingston-to-Seattle fast ferry service after Thanksgiving — The new route will join Kitsap Transit’s Bremerton Fast Ferry, which launched service last year, after Kitsap County voters narrowly approved a 0.3 percent sales tax to fund the new fleet of passenger ferries.
► In today’s News Tribune — Census Bureau will be hiring hundreds in Tacoma — At least 300 temporary jobs are available ahead of the 2020 Census. Pay ranges from $16.50 an hour to $20.50 an hour.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Everett Massacre’s details not fully known, but new sources may help (by Julie Muhlstein) — On Sunday, the eve of the 102nd anniversary of Everett’s waterfront gun battle, Christopher Summit gave a talk titled “A Problem With Sources.” The program was at the Anchor Pub, near where gunfire erupted on what became known as Everett’s Bloody Sunday.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — State Attorney General Bob Ferguson was among those who filed suit against Motel 6 for violating guests’ privacy here in Washington.
► In today’s NY Times — Was Amazon’s headquarters contest a bait-and-switch? Critics say yes — What a farce. That was one of the immediate reactions when word leaked out on Monday that Amazon’s much-ballyhooed search for a second headquarters outside of Seattle would result in not one, but two new locations. On Twitter, people used farce, sham or stunt to describe what had happened.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Big Tech pushes back against ‘dramatic increase’ in H-1B visa denials — Industry group Compete America said in a letter to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration that the agency’s approach to deciding who gets an H-1B was “leaving employers with a disruptive lack of clarity about the agency’s practices, procedures, and policies.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.