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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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130 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

For several years, Gorton maintained that Congress should buy back<br />

the Indians’ rights to <strong>of</strong>f-reservation salmon through condemnation proceedings,<br />

much like the government acquires l<strong>and</strong> for a new freeway.<br />

After achieving condemnation for public necessity, a court could determine<br />

the dollar value <strong>of</strong> the treaty rights <strong>and</strong> send the bill to Congress,<br />

the attorney general told the 1976 Pierce County Republican Convention.<br />

“Redress is the duty <strong>of</strong> all the people in this country, not just a few fishermen<br />

in a h<strong>and</strong>ful <strong>of</strong> Western states.” Two years earlier, they had practically<br />

expelled him from the party for urging Nixon to resign. This speech<br />

met with rousing applause. 30<br />

Ramona Bennett, the leader <strong>of</strong> the Puyallup Tribe, was outraged.<br />

“Rights aren’t for sale,” she said. “When you sell your rights, you have<br />

sold yourself, <strong>and</strong> the Indians are not for sale. Fishing is our identity. It’s<br />

our future, our sense <strong>of</strong> history. Indian children can’t grow up to be white<br />

people. If they can’t find an Indian future for themselves, they’re dead.<br />

Taking our fishing rights would be genocide. . . . Would Gorton sell his<br />

children, or his law degree or his citizenship?” 31<br />

Nor was Governor Evans impressed by the idea. Purchasing the Indians’<br />

fishing rights would be “very, very expensive, <strong>and</strong> very, very difficult,”<br />

he said. Evans advocated exp<strong>and</strong>ing propagation programs to provide<br />

enough salmon for commercial fishermen, anglers <strong>and</strong> the tribes.<br />

That was a lot easier said than done, he acknowledged, especially given<br />

international pressures on the resource. 32<br />

Justice Johnson says it was no secret that Evans <strong>and</strong> Gorton disagreed<br />

over Indian fishing issues, but it was always philosophical, not personal.<br />

“Slade had a longst<strong>and</strong>ing close relationship with the governor. Governors<br />

do not have authority over the AG; that’s true, but they can (exert<br />

influence).” Johnson’s predecessor as chief <strong>of</strong> the attorney general’s Game<br />

<strong>and</strong> Fisheries division, Larry Coniff, was reassigned in 1975 for criticizing<br />

the Fisheries director, Thor Tollefson, at a Fisheries Department Christmas<br />

Party. 33 Tollefson shared Evans’ view that the resource should be divided<br />

equally among the sports, commercial <strong>and</strong> Indian fishermen. An<br />

outspoken ideologue, Coniff was a holdover from O’Connell’s days as attorney<br />

general. His indiscretion gave Gorton an opportunity to install<br />

Johnson. It certainly wasn’t a sop to Evans. <strong>The</strong> tribes would come to view<br />

Johnson as a greater threat than Coniff because he was so shrewd.<br />

Gorton always “had my back,” Johnson says. When the bumptious<br />

Dixy Lee Ray became governor in 1977 Johnson says she tried to get him<br />

fired more than once—the first time over a case that stemmed from a<br />

major salmon kill on the Columbia. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Washington</strong> Public Power Sup-

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