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booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

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term limits proposal on the November ballot, which he denounced as a terrible idea, had<br />

anything to do with his decision. (The initiative was soundly defeated 12 days later.) Booth<br />

said he wouldn’t rule out running for the Senate if fellow Democrat Brock Adams bowed<br />

out. He might challenge Republican Senator Slade Gorton in 1994 – even run for governor<br />

again if his successor “comes in behind me and trashes the <strong>of</strong>fice.”<br />

* * *<br />

Booth was indifferent about another controversial issue on the 1991 ballot – “Death<br />

with Dignity,” which would have allowed a terminally ill person to request and receive a<br />

lethal dose <strong>of</strong> drugs from a physician. “My instincts tell me people ought to have the choice<br />

as it relates to themselves,” he said in an interview. “Then I made the mistake <strong>of</strong> starting<br />

to think about it. The more I think about it, the more I think it needs to have a good open<br />

debate and discussion, and I need to get involved in some <strong>of</strong> that. It takes two doctors to<br />

declare a terminal illness. Then you get into what’s ‘terminal,’ because we’re always talking<br />

probabilities.” Another thing that gave him pause was the possibility that weary caregivers<br />

could pressure terminally ill people “to make a decision that it would be best for them to<br />

terminate their lives, when in reality maybe they don’t want to do so at all. But having said<br />

all that, my instinct is that it ought to be a personal choice.”<br />

The issue was rejected by the voters, with nearly 54 percent opposed. The Roman<br />

Catholic Church spent nearly $500,000 and waged a full-pulpit-press against physicianassisted<br />

suicide and an initiative to reaffirm abortion rights, narrowly losing on the latter<br />

issue. Seventeen years later, a revised Death with Dignity issue would be Booth Gardner’s<br />

“last campaign.”<br />

* * *<br />

The governor invited an unsuspecting Denny Heck to a private lunch at the mansion<br />

about a week before his announcement. His chief <strong>of</strong> staff had barely unfolded his napkin<br />

when the governor leaned forward and said there would be no third term. “You could<br />

have knocked me over,” Heck says. “It was a real gut-shot. It was so far ahead <strong>of</strong> time. He<br />

didn’t have to make a decision for months.” Earlier that year, Heck says, Booth seriously<br />

considered running for the Senate. Adams had been wounded by allegations he had<br />

drugged and sexually molested a former congressional aide. Booth would have been the<br />

instant frontrunner even if Adams had run. He caught hell from the Adams people and<br />

other Democrats when he worried out loud about the party’s prospects for keeping the<br />

seat if Adams or Mike Lowry won the nomination. Dick Larsen charged that Gardner’s<br />

candor was fresh evidence that he was “imperious, tactless and politically dumb.” He<br />

posited that it was the handiwork <strong>of</strong> Heck, “the Ayatollah <strong>of</strong> the governor’s strategy shop,<br />

to give Gardner some new spark by floating the notion <strong>of</strong> him as a U.S. Senator.” For Heck,<br />

this was a veritable badge <strong>of</strong> honor and better by far, in any case, than a “Blame Governor<br />

Heck” button.<br />

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