DAILY NEWS
Stop the shutdown FIRST ● Ferries needed ● Why drugs cost so much
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
TRUMP’S SHUTDOWN
From Common Dreams — ‘Time to play hardball:’ Progressives pressure Senate Democrats to stonewall all bills that don’t end Trump shutdown — As of this writing, at least 10 senators have publicly vowed to stand with the progressive grassroots and block legislation unrelated to reopening the government. Those senators are: Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Tom Carper (D-Del.), and Mark Warner (D-Va.).
► From The Hill — Pelosi cranks up shutdown pressure on Trump, GOP — Democrats this week will repackage a handful of uncontroversial bills funding a number of shuttered agencies — excluding Homeland Security, which covers the proposed wall — and send them off to the Senate one by one, forcing GOP leaders to explain their promised inaction on measures they supported just weeks ago.
► In today’s NY Times — As government shutdown persists, Americans feel the bite — The impact of a partial government shutdown began to ripple across the economy as it stretched into Day 17, with mortgage applications delayed, public companies unable to get approval to raise capital and thousands of Secret Service agents expected to show up for work without pay.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump will take his case for border wall to public in national address — The White House announced that Trump would make a prime-time address Tuesday night and then travel to the southern border this week.
► AP Fact Check — Do ex-presidents back Trump wall? They say no.
► In today’s Washington Post — Free airtime for Trump? Not so fast. (by Carter Eskew) — Trump has the expectation that the broadcast television networks will break into their regular programming to air it. But those networks have no legal obligation to give him free airtime to speak about his border wall. Indeed, they have a journalistic responsibility not to do so.
► In today’s NY Times — Borderline insanity (editorial) — Trump rained cruelties on immigrants and asylum seekers and now wants hundreds of millions of dollars to address the humanitarian crisis he caused.
► From the AP — Air travelers start to feel effects of government shutdown
► From The Hill — Shutdown’s effects close in on U.S. Supreme Court
► From Politico — Food stamps for millions become pawn in shutdown fight
► From KUOW — Despite 70,000 furloughed IRS workers, Trump vows tax refunds will be issued — Don’t expect many answers from the IRS to questions you might have about the new tax law.
► From CrossCut — Shutdown: a ‘potential catastrophe’ for Seattle’s low-income renters — Neither landlords nor tenants are panicking. Yet.
► From The Hill — Shutdown makes it difficult for NASA to attract young talent, says tech labor leader — IFPTE President Paul Shearon said the ongoing partial government shutdown makes the prospect of working at a federal agency such as NASA less appealing for young workers.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From KNKX — Washington State Ferries plans to replace half its vessels, expand fleet by 2040 — The agency estimates most of that operating cost would be covered by existing taxes and fares. But lawmakers will have to make decisions in the near future when it comes to funding the capital costs.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Legislative session will tackle education funding, taxes, mental health funding — “My No. 1 goal next session is to stop the Democrats from raising taxes,” said Rep. Jeremie Dufault (R-Selah).
LOCAL
► In today’s Columbian — Vancouver Public Schools faces $11.4 million budget deficit — Vancouver Public Schools projects an $11.4 million budget deficit in the coming school year, and it says salary deals with teachers and educational support staff are partly to blame.
► From Slog — Rod Dembowski is the new King County Council Chair
NATIONAL
► From The Onion — Convict sentenced to generating $80,000 to $100,000 in profits for private prison — “The defendant is hereby ordered to create a minimum of $80,000 in net profits at a medium security prison owned and operated by the CoreCivic corporation,” said Judge Gary Mueller.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
“The main takeaway of our study should be that increases in prices of brand-name drugs were largely driven by year-over-year price increases of drugs that were already in the market,” says Immaculata Hernandez, an assistant professor of pharmacy at the University of Pittsburgh, and the lead author of the study.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.