02.02.2013 Views

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

16 | Bicentennial Follies<br />

<strong>The</strong> coveR <strong>of</strong> Time MAgAzine on February 17, 1975, did a lot more<br />

than pique Gorton’s interest. “Scoop Out Front,” it declared. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

was Henry M. Jackson, looking decidedly presidential. Only 15<br />

years earlier, <strong>Washington</strong>’s squeaky-clean Sc<strong>and</strong>inavian senator was his<br />

friend Jack Kennedy’s first choice for vice president. <strong>The</strong>re had been so<br />

much water over the dam it seemed like a century. Jackson now had “by far<br />

his best <strong>and</strong> certainly his last bona fide opportunity to win the presidency<br />

<strong>and</strong> reinvigorate” the centrist wing <strong>of</strong> the Democratic Party, Time said.<br />

In politics as well as temperament Gorton <strong>and</strong> Jackson had much in<br />

common, even more, in fact, than Gorton realized at the time. Scoop was<br />

the wild card in <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> politics in the bicentennial year. If he<br />

won the Democratic nomination for president,<br />

the political power grid would be energized<br />

by a whole series <strong>of</strong> job opportunities,<br />

from the county courthouse to the<br />

state capital, U.S. House <strong>and</strong> Senate.<br />

Jackson declared his c<strong>and</strong>idacy for president<br />

nearly two years out, hoping to foreclose<br />

the competition. President Ford was<br />

an “honest <strong>and</strong> honorable man,” Jackson<br />

said, “a decent man” who had nevertheless<br />

failed to meet the challenge <strong>of</strong> a deepening<br />

recession, mounting inflation, the<br />

energy crisis <strong>and</strong> pressing foreign policy<br />

issues. Unlike 1972, when he began as a<br />

virtual unknown, Jackson was immedi- Jackson on the cover <strong>of</strong> Time.<br />

ately the frontrunner. Ralph Nader’s Study<br />

Group pronounced him the most effective<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the U.S. Senate. His name recognition was at 60 percent nationally<br />

<strong>and</strong> rising. Jackson was strong on national defense; an unwavering<br />

friend <strong>of</strong> Israel <strong>and</strong> foe <strong>of</strong> détente, appalled by the Soviet Union’s op-<br />

139

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!