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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

wholly owned subsidiary <strong>of</strong> organized labor <strong>and</strong> the Democratic Party,”<br />

adding that when Adams left Congress the Social Security system was<br />

hemorrhaging $1 million an hour. Gorton insisted that every vote he’d<br />

cast was to help make the trust fund solvent <strong>and</strong> reduce the deficit. Adams<br />

responded with a rally featuring Congressman Pepper, who celebrated<br />

his 86 th birthday in Seattle by declaring that if Reagan <strong>and</strong> Gorton<br />

had their way seniors would be eating Alpo. Democrats also alleged<br />

that Gorton had over-stated his role in securing passage <strong>of</strong> the wilderness<br />

bill. <strong>The</strong> Manion-for-Dwyer hostage swap helped create more doubts<br />

about his integrity. Hanford was the game-changer.<br />

when the fedeRAL depARtMent <strong>of</strong> eneRgy named Hanford as one <strong>of</strong><br />

three finalists for a national nuclear waste repository <strong>and</strong> wanted to drill<br />

an exploratory shaft deep into the basalt caverns beneath the Columbia,<br />

polls found the citizenry overwhelmingly opposed. Scoop <strong>and</strong> Maggie<br />

had “real clout,” Adams said. Where was Gorton when the feds wanted to<br />

dump on his state? In 1982, Adams noted, Gorton said a nuclear waste<br />

repository was “a national responsibility from which no state should<br />

be allowed to remove itself unilaterally.” True, said Gorton, but he also<br />

helped write an amendment m<strong>and</strong>ating a second repository so that Hanford,<br />

if selected, wouldn’t have to carry the whole load. “My opponent<br />

doesn’t tell you that.” Adams shot back that Scoop had favored an amendment<br />

calling for a national survey <strong>of</strong> potential sites <strong>and</strong> delaying the<br />

whole process until 1987. Gorton opposed it. Gorton said the process was<br />

now being politicized, the administration having shelved studies for a<br />

second repository in the East. <strong>The</strong> process should be turned over to an<br />

independent board, he insisted. 4<br />

It was radioactive tit for tat. Adams had the best one-liner. When Gorton<br />

urged his constituents to write letters to Energy <strong>Secretary</strong> John Herrington,<br />

a Reagan appointee, Adams snorted, “It’s time to fight, not write.<br />

He couldn’t deliver for the state, so he’s asking the Post Office to deliver<br />

for him.” 5<br />

Governor Gardner was busy ginning up a referendum on the issue to<br />

help energize the Democratic base for November. Adams also denounced<br />

a proposal by Gorton, Evans <strong>and</strong> Congressman Morrison to investigate<br />

converting one <strong>of</strong> the mothballed <strong>Washington</strong> Public Power Supply<br />

System plants to produce less-radioactive weapons-grade fuel so the old<br />

“Chernobyl-style” N Reactor could be decommissioned. <strong>The</strong>y said the<br />

plan <strong>of</strong>fered the added advantage <strong>of</strong> helping the struggling Supply System.<br />

Among the proletariat, sympathy for WPPSS was in short supply.

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