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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

South Carolina, who lost his job as Budget Committee chairman in the<br />

Reagan Revolution. “We didn’t worry about deficits <strong>and</strong> that is why we’re<br />

the minority party.” 2<br />

<strong>The</strong> Reagan brain trust believed the Domenici plan was unlikely to be<br />

approved by the House <strong>and</strong> worried it would jeopardize Republican reelection<br />

prospects at mid-term. Domenici, who skillfully worked both<br />

sides <strong>of</strong> the aisle, polled the committee on how it wished to proceed. <strong>The</strong><br />

Republicans were resolute, the Democrats diffident. J. Bennett Johnston,<br />

a conservative Democrat from Louisiana, warned, “We’re not going to be<br />

able to do it without the active involvement <strong>and</strong> leadership <strong>of</strong> the Great<br />

Communicator himself.” Gorton was undeterred, saying, “<strong>The</strong> flag <strong>of</strong><br />

leadership is passing from the White House to this committee.” 3<br />

Domenici <strong>and</strong> Gorton had asked the administration to submit more<br />

detailed economic assumptions underlying its proposed cuts. Stockman<br />

<strong>and</strong> Treasury <strong>Secretary</strong> Donald Regan made back-to-back appearances<br />

before the budget committees to plead their case. When Gorton defended<br />

the Export-Import Bank, which helped finance sales <strong>of</strong> Boeing jets, Stockman<br />

insisted that its funding should be cut by $220 million. <strong>The</strong> pain<br />

had to be shared. Gorton found an ally in Nancy Kassebaum <strong>of</strong> Kansas,<br />

already a senior member <strong>of</strong> the committee after only two years in the Senate.<br />

Boeing had a plant in her state, too. <strong>The</strong>y pushed through a motion to<br />

restore half the funds for the bank, substituting cuts in subsidized housing<br />

<strong>and</strong> community development to <strong>of</strong>fset the move. 4<br />

While the Budget Committee backed federal spending cuts <strong>of</strong> $34.6<br />

billion in fiscal year 1982, it also approved Gorton’s amendment to add<br />

$18 million to help Public Health Service hospitals in Seattle, Baltimore<br />

<strong>and</strong> New York City comply with federal fire safety codes. That enabled<br />

them to qualify for Medicare <strong>and</strong> Medicaid reimbursement <strong>and</strong> made it<br />

easier for them to survive on their own. Magnuson was pleased. Maggie<br />

had championed the hospitals, out-foxing President Nixon to keep them<br />

open. Gorton also helped save the Urban Indian Health program in 1983<br />

when Reagan wanted to kill it. 5<br />

in the wAKe <strong>of</strong> the AssAssinAtion <strong>of</strong> Egyptian President Anwar el-<br />

Sadat by Muslim fundamentalists in October <strong>of</strong> 1981, Gorton <strong>and</strong> Bob<br />

Kasten sponsored a resolution to veto Reagan’s $8.5-billion plan to sell<br />

Saudi Arabia five Boeing-built Airborne Warning <strong>and</strong> Control System<br />

planes, nearly 1,200 Sidewinder missiles <strong>and</strong> upgrades for its F-15 fighter<br />

jets. Some critics <strong>of</strong> the AWACS deal called it a dangerous, cynical swap<br />

to protect access to Saudi oil <strong>and</strong> give the U.S. a military foothold in the

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