NEWS ROUNDUP
‘Don’t make me sick’ ● Trump’s war ● WV teachers walk and win
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Teamsters vote to OK strike at Industrial Container Services
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Arlington school bond again falls short of required 60% — As ballots from last Tuesday’s special election have slowed to a trickle, it appears the Arlington School District bond measure will again fail to meet the 60 percent approval threshold required by state law. As of 5 p.m. Friday, the proposal had received 52.6 percent voter approval.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Let the majority rule!
EDITOR’S NOTE — Let the local voters decide! (Speaking of which…)
► In today’s News Tribune — Eyman lawyers say Office Depot chair removal was accident, but he faces theft charge — Attorneys for Tim Eyman, the anti-tax activist and initiative promoter who is accused of stealing a $70 chair from an Office Depot store in Lacey last week, say it was an accident, not theft.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From The Hill — Trump declares New York Times ‘enemy of the people’ — Trump labeled The New York Times “a true enemy of the people” after an extensive report (above) detailing the ways in which he has sought to influence the investigations into his presidency and allies.
► In today’s Washington Post — No one in Congress should be allowed to avoid voting on this presidential power grab (editorial) — Congress has already provided a means of checking executive overreach through the termination of a declared emergency by a simple majority vote of both chambers. If the Democratic House disapproved Trump’s declaration, the Senate would be required to vote on the matter, too, within 18 days. Crucially, such a resolution would be considered “privileged” and could not be filibustered. But Trump retains the power to veto a joint resolution. Therefore, Congress could terminate the emergency only by overriding his veto, with a two-thirds vote of both houses. As much of a long shot as it may seem…. No one in the House or Senate should be allowed to avoid voting on this presidential power grab, and being held accountable for it by the voters.
► From HuffPost — Trump administration says it will rescind $929 million in funds for California high-speed rail — The announcement comes one day after California joined a 16-state lawsuit challenging the president’s emergency declaration to fund a border wall.
► In today’s NY Times — Election fraud the GOP won’t stress about (editorial) — North Carolina election officials are detailing how a longtime political operative, working for a Republican candidate, conspired to steal an election last year. Turns out, voting fraud is as real as Russia’s crusade to put Trump in the White House. It just looks nothing like what Republicans keep hitting the panic button over. Which tells you even more about Trump and his party than it does about the so-called perils of voter fraud.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — As noted yesterday: When we fight, we win.
► From Vox — Illinois and New Jersey just passed a $15 minimum wage. That means 1.8 million workers get a raise. — Years of strikes and rallies to raise the minimum wage across the U.S. are starting to pay off. Earlier this month, New Jersey became the fourth state in the country to raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour. Illinois is poised to become the fifth one.
Again?!
► From KQ2 — Missouri could once again vote on ‘right-to-work’ — Just months after Missouri votersrejected Proposition A, a new petition could place another right-to-work initiative on the 2020 ballot. Last week, a petition from former GOP chair Todd Graves was certified for circulation that would allow voters to decide the issue again. During the 2018 primary election 67 percent of Missourians voted against becoming a right-to-work state.
► In the Kansas City Star — Missouri voters have spoken on right-to-work law. Why do Republicans want a do-over? (editorial) — We know what Missourians think of right to work. It’s an effort to break unions and pay workers lower wages. The state doesn’t need another messy, expensive debate on right to work in anytime soon.
► In the Buffalo News — New Era Cap reaches severance agreement with workers, will close plant at end of March — New Era has reached a severance-package agreement with the CWA, the union that represents most of the company’s 200-plus workers at the Derby, NY, manufacturing facility it is closing next month.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.