Looking back on his first term.
A studio apartment in San Francisco now costs $1,700 per month. Hence the madness.
How a woman in a leopard-print mini-skirt brought down the Kansas attorney general.
What to do when your friends become rock 'n' roll stars? Go along for the ride.
All of which raises the question: If Airbus is covetous of Boeing's state welfare and would put a "Made in America" label on its version of the tanker, why not build them—or any other Airbus planes—in Washington state? It could mean lots of jobs and perhaps billions of dollars for the state economy. In return, Airbus gets the same sweetheart deal as Boeing. You see, it would have been illegal for a single corporation to be the beneficiary of the state tax break, so the law that Locke proposed and legislators approved last June generically allows any "aircraft manufacturer" to take advantage of the multibillion-dollar tax credits.
Surely, Gov. Locke and the economic development team that spent millions and worked overtime to land the 7E7, extolling the paybacks of helping the "industry" and expanding state employment, must be aggressively pursuing the prospect that Airbus could provide similar benefits by locating a production facility here. It would seem automatic that Locke's Department of Community, Trade, and Economic Development would recruit the world's largest commercial airplane maker, a title Airbus took from Boeing last year, to join Boeing in its home state and make Washington the undisputed capital of airline production. Such an effort could also offset the bad news, as The Seattle Times reported from Farnborough last week, that one of Boeing's 7E7 partners is likely to locate its 500-job assembly facility in another state, a setback to the governor's predicted 7E7 economic benefits.
Sorry, says Locke's office. Not interested.
"No," says Robin Pollard, director of Locke's economic development office, the state is not trying to woo Airbus. Period. Asked if this was being done in deference to the governor's allegiance to homegrown Boeing, Pollard said, simply, she "did not have anything to say in response." To some, that's a position as questionable as giving away those billions for the 7E7—an assembly-line (rather than manufacturing) project whose workforce will number less than 1,000. "I'm 'shocked' the state isn't actively wooing Airbus," says Jason Mercier of the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, feigning real surprise. The government-watchdog group in Olympia has battled Locke over the tax giveaway and thinks the governor's office sold out taxpayers. "Airbus has promised to build the plane in the U.S., as opposed to taking U.S. tax dollars to facilitate plans to send manufacturing jobs out of state and country—like Boeing," says Mercier. "Sounds like the state could market to Airbus the properties Boeing is selling so that Washington manufacturing jobs could be created in building [the] tankers."