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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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A goLd wAtch foR MAggie 159<br />

on stage with Jimmy Carter, Jackson, Magnuson <strong>and</strong> a host <strong>of</strong> other Democratic<br />

poobahs <strong>and</strong> hopefuls. “Maggie’s staffers sat me right next to him.<br />

My orders were to grab him by the back <strong>of</strong> his pants <strong>and</strong> help him st<strong>and</strong><br />

up whenever there was an applause line. You couldn’t tell it from the<br />

front,” Dotzauer cackles, “but I had him by the back <strong>of</strong> his britches.”<br />

Howard Baker stumped with Slade in Seattle <strong>and</strong> Spokane after the<br />

primary. <strong>The</strong> campaign hoped he would allude to Maggie’s appetite for<br />

alcohol, but the minority leader flatly refused. <strong>The</strong> epitome <strong>of</strong> a Southern<br />

gentleman, Baker loved the Senate. Later, Baker explained to Gorton his<br />

conviction that a senator could appropriately campaign for any c<strong>and</strong>idate<br />

<strong>of</strong> his party in any state. However, he could never make negative comments<br />

about a colleague. “He taught me something about the United<br />

<strong>State</strong>s Senate as an institution,” says Gorton. Baker is one <strong>of</strong> his political<br />

heroes.<br />

in the wAning dAys, Ted Kennedy jetted to Seattle for a fundraiser <strong>and</strong><br />

gave one <strong>of</strong> his patented tub-thumpers to several thous<strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> the faithful.<br />

“Maggie can achieve more in six minutes than other senators achieve in<br />

an entire six-year term!” Kennedy thundered. In a twist, Magnuson was<br />

also hoping for coattails from Jim McDermott, the young state senator<br />

who had settled one score by depriving “Madame Zonga”—the despised<br />

Dixy Lee Ray—<strong>of</strong> renomination <strong>and</strong> was thought to be leading John<br />

Spellman in the race for governor.<br />

Magnuson spent upwards <strong>of</strong> $1.25 million; Gorton about $900,000,<br />

but he nearly matched the incumbent on advertising buys. Newman’s<br />

ads for Gorton, produced by David Stern’s Seattle agency, were clever <strong>and</strong><br />

well timed. 13<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seattle Times endorsed Gorton, saying he had “the vigor, vision,<br />

experience <strong>and</strong> grasp <strong>of</strong> today’s realities to give <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> a fresh,<br />

effectively different voice in the Senate.” <strong>The</strong> Post-Intelligencer said Magnuson’s<br />

seniority was too valuable to lose but “Gorton, we think, would<br />

make a first-class senator.” <strong>The</strong> Spokesman-Review in Spokane praised<br />

Gorton’s “stamina <strong>and</strong> vision.” <strong>The</strong> Weekly, striving to <strong>of</strong>fer Seattle a cliché-free<br />

zone, gave a worldly shrug: “Senator Magnuson is out <strong>of</strong> political<br />

fashion; his staff isn’t what it used to be; if he serves out the next term<br />

that will be 50 years in Congress, which is too long for anyone’s brain.<br />

Senator Gorton is smooth, quick, up with the political trends, a cunning<br />

legislator, master <strong>of</strong> the data. It adds up to an irrational choice: vote for<br />

Maggie.” 14<br />

Barnstorming 6,600 miles across America on election eve, hapless

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