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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

If there was any deficit anxiety in the electorate, the Gipper had the<br />

elixir. Reagan could have reprised the defining moment <strong>of</strong> the 1980 debate<br />

when he looked the TV camera square in the lens <strong>and</strong> asked Americans,<br />

“Are you better <strong>of</strong>f now than you were four years ago?” But this time<br />

he didn’t need to ask. <strong>The</strong> economy was sizzling, generating four million<br />

new jobs. Inflation had declined to 3.2 percent, the lowest in 11 years. 17<br />

Reagan was re-elected with nearly 59 percent <strong>of</strong> the popular vote <strong>and</strong><br />

the largest Electoral College margin in history. <strong>The</strong> flip side was his surprising<br />

lack <strong>of</strong> coattails—a gain <strong>of</strong> only 14 GOP seats in the House <strong>and</strong> a<br />

loss <strong>of</strong> two in the Senate. Tennessee elected Democrat Al Gore Jr. to succeed<br />

the retiring Howard Baker. <strong>The</strong> election “left the ideological divisions<br />

in Congress more raw than ever.” 18<br />

Gorton had voted with his president a “whopping” 85 percent <strong>of</strong> the<br />

time, <strong>The</strong> Seattle Times declared, noting that only a h<strong>and</strong>ful <strong>of</strong> staunch<br />

conservatives—including Ted Stevens <strong>and</strong> Strom Thurmond—had been<br />

more loyal. This was lost on Ronald Reagan, who should have been more<br />

appreciative, but not on Mike Lowry or Brock Adams. <strong>The</strong> two ambitious<br />

Seattle liberals never missed a chance to style Gorton as a right-wing<br />

Reagan lapdog. Adams had been out <strong>of</strong> politics since 1979 when Jimmy<br />

Carter requested his resignation as secretary <strong>of</strong> transportation in a general<br />

Cabinet housecleaning that largely testified to the disarray in the<br />

White House. 18<br />

Adams believed he alone could beat Gorton.<br />

AfteR the eLection, Bob Dole edged Alaska’s Ted Stevens, the assistant<br />

leader for eight years, in a tense contest to succeed Baker as Senate majority<br />

leader. Domenici was eliminated on the second ballot. Gorton, despite<br />

a spirited campaign, lost the race for the No. 2 leadership post, majority<br />

whip, to genial Alan Simpson <strong>of</strong> Wyoming. “It was a great adventure,”<br />

said Slade. “I learned more about the Senate <strong>and</strong> more about myself. But<br />

I had the misfortune <strong>of</strong> running against a man who may be the single<br />

most popular individual in the Senate.” He was upbeat as usual, though,<br />

certain he had gained from the loss because people recognized that he<br />

was a go-getter. 19<br />

Gorton <strong>and</strong> Evans voted for Domenici, but his bipartisanship <strong>and</strong> zeal<br />

for a balanced budget combined to undermine his bids for leadership<br />

spots during his 36 years in Congress. One <strong>of</strong> Pete’s keepsakes was a<br />

framed drawing <strong>of</strong> Sisyphus, the Greek condemned by the gods to pushing<br />

a huge boulder up a hill, only to have it roll right back down the minute<br />

he got to the top. Domenici couldn’t win for trying. Democrats

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