NEWS ROUNDUP
UFW steps up | Cowardly Jan. 6 denial | PRO Act vs. Senate ‘graveyard’
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
COVID-19
► LIVE from the Seattle Times — Coronavirus daily news update, May 19 — The latest count of COVID-19 cases in Washington totals 424,050 infections (7-day average of new infections per day: 1,137) and 5,653 deaths. Vaccination: 47.21% of Washington residents have received their first dose; 37.54% are fully vaccinated.
► From the Spokesman-Review — Advocates push to overcome Latino vaccine hesitancy
► From HuffPost — Paid time off could boost slowing vaccination rates — A new survey shows Black and Latino workers in particular are concerned about missing work — and pay — because of the vaccine’s side effects.
TODAY at The Stand — Patty Murray keeps fighting for paid leave — “We cannot rebuild a stronger and fairer economy if workers are forced to choose between their — and their families’ — health, or their paychecks,” the U.S. senator says at a Tuesday hearing.
► From Politico — ‘Public Health 101 failure’: CDC mask decision may knock out Biden’s workplace COVID crackdown — The CDC’s surprise mask-dropping guidance for those who are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 may have killed any effort to require their blanket use in workplaces — a bitter disappointment to unions and other safety advocates who have been pushing the Biden administration to tighten things up on the job, not loosen them.
► From The Hill — Fauci: Americans ‘misinterpreting’ mask rules — “I think people are misinterpreting, thinking that this is a removal of a mask mandate for everyone. It’s not,” said Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert. “It’s an assurance to those who are vaccinated that they can feel safe, be they outdoors or indoors.”
► From the AP — Changed by pandemic, many workers won’t return to old jobs — There’s a wild card in the push to return to pre-pandemic life: Many workers don’t want to go back to the jobs they once had… Nate Mullins quit his job as a bartender last November after clashing with managers over mask rules and worrying that he would spread the coronavirus to his immune-compromised sister. Mullins’ unemployment checks don’t match what he was making at his Oak Harbor, Wash., bar, but they’re enough to get by while he looks for jobs that would provide health care and retirement benefits. “This opportunity to take a step back and really think about what you’re doing really changed my mind,” he said. “(It) made me think long-term for the first time.”
THIS WASHINGTON
► From the News Tribune — Governor signs $59 billion, two-year budget for Washington — Gov. Jay Inslee on Tuesday signed a $59 billion, two-year state operating budget that he said would help provide relief and recovery from the widespread effects of the pandemic. The Democrat also signed an $11.8 billion transportation budget and a $6.3 billion state construction budget. Inslee noted that the budget makes vital investments in areas like public health, homelessness, climate change, access to broadband and child care. He said it was a good thing that lawmakers previously resisted widespread calls (from state Republicans) to slash state spending for services because the budget situation improved during the year.
► From the AP — Washington governor signs sweeping police reform measures — Inslee on Tuesday signed one of the nation’s most ambitious packages of police accountability legislation, prompted by last year’s outcry for racial justice following the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black people at the hands of police. The dozen bills Inslee signed include outright bans on police use of chokeholds, neck restraints and no-knock warrants. They also require officers to intervene if their colleagues engage in excessive force.
► From the (Everett) Herald — Inslee’s partial vetoes threat to lawmakers’ work (editorial) — The governor’s desire for due speed on climate issues is laudable; his executive overreach is not.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Which brings us to…
INSURRECTION
► From The Hill — GOP splits open over Jan. 6 commission vote — The House on Wednesday is set to approve legislation to create a bipartisan investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack in a vote that will re-expose the deep divisions in the GOP over Trump’s role in the event and influence in the party. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Tuesday announced his opposition to the legislation.
► From The Hill — Trump calls for Jan. 6 commission debate to end ‘immediately’
EDITOR’S NOTE — Well, of course he does.
► From Politico — McCarthy races to contain GOP defections on Jan. 6 commission — Dozens of Republicans are privately considering voting for the Jan. 6 commission.
► From the Washington Post — A GOP congressman compared Capitol rioters to tourists. Photos show him barricading a door.
THE PRO ACT
► From Roll Call — Biden’s labor support may stall unless Senate enacts protections — President Joe Biden may be a labor-friendly president, but months into his term he is running out of ways to support unions without help from Congress. Unions praised Biden’s actions so far, but union leaders and labor economists say there’s a limit to what Biden can do unless the Senate passes a bill that would strengthen protections for workers forming a union (the PRO Act). Even Plan B would involve getting provisions of that bill attached to something else that could pass. Biden’s and the Democrats’ labor record among unionized workers may depend on those provisions getting enacted.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — Clock ticking on Biden as second GOP infrastructure meeting yields little progress — A group of Senate Republicans held a second meeting in less than a week with Biden officials to discuss infrastructure. But they’re still far apart on a deal.
► From Politico — Liberals to Biden: Ditch the infrastructure talks with Republicans
► From Vox — These workers were left out of the New Deal. They’ve been fighting for better pay ever since. — For decades, home care has been defined as a profession with low wages, long hours, and scant benefits. Biden’s $2.25 trillion American Jobs Plan contains a provision that could help change that: $400 billion to make long-term care cheaper and raise care workers’ wages.
► From Common Dreams — ‘You lie’: Katie Porter wields ‘Whiteboard of Justice’ while grilling Pharma CEO on price hikes
Big Pharma says they need to charge astronomical prices to pay for research and development. Yet, the amount they spend on manipulating the market to enrich shareholders completely eclipses what’s spent on R&D. Today, I confronted a CEO about the industry’s lies, with visuals ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/c3jSLr0yVd
— Rep. Katie Porter (@RepKatiePorter) May 18, 2021
► From Reuters — Biden’s Supreme Court Commission to meet as abortion debate reignites — Biden’s commission to study potential changes to the U.S. Supreme Court, including expanding the number of justices as some liberal activists have urged, is set to hold its first public meeting on Wednesday, two days after the court charged back into the battle over abortion.
► From the Washington Post — House passes bill to combat hate crimes against Asian Americans
NATIONAL
► From Business Insider — Sanders, AOC will join striking McDonald’s workers demanding higher wages ahead of the chain’s annual investor meeting — Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will join McDonald’s workers in strikes planned around the U.S. for higher wages on May 19, the day before the company’s annual shareholders meeting. On “Walkout Wednesday,” employees in 15 US cities will go on strike to demand all McDonald’s workers make at least $15 per hour. So far, the strikes are planned for Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Miami, Tampa, Orlando, Chicago, Detroit, Flint, Kansas City, St Louis, Raleigh-Durham, Fayetteville, Houston, and Milwaukee.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.