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

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

tRicK oR tReAt 217<br />

When seven workers for a Hanford contractor were dismissed for mish<strong>and</strong>ling<br />

plutonium, the specter <strong>of</strong> a deadly accident or the contamination<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Columbia aquifer grew more menacing, with the WPPSS bond<br />

debacle thrown in for bad measure.<br />

In June, an energized Adams gave the speech <strong>of</strong> his life at the <strong>State</strong><br />

Democratic Convention in Spokane. “In the past, our Northwest senators<br />

fought our tough battles in the Senate,” he thundered. “We won when<br />

California tried to take our water. We won when others tried to put supertankers<br />

in Puget Sound. But what do we win now?—the DOE nuclear<br />

lottery! <strong>The</strong> East gets the power <strong>and</strong> we get the garbage. Maybe we should<br />

call the site the Slade Gorton Memorial Dump!” <strong>The</strong> delegates leapt to<br />

their feet, cheering <strong>and</strong> chanting “Brock! Brock!” 6<br />

with congRess stiLL in session, Gorton was a red-eyed weekend warrior.<br />

A mid-August poll for the Adams campaign showed the Democrat<br />

closing the gap to 4 percent, with 20 percent <strong>of</strong> the likely voters undecided.<br />

Although Gorton’s tracking polls around Labor Day indicated<br />

Slade still had big lead, low-turnout primaries are a crap shoot. Newman<br />

<strong>and</strong> Excell were worried. Confirmation arrived in the form <strong>of</strong> a lightning<br />

bolt on the night <strong>of</strong> September 16 when the primary election ballots were<br />

tallied. Adams nearly outpolled Gorton. <strong>The</strong> turnout was 27 percent, <strong>and</strong><br />

fewer than 20 percent <strong>of</strong> the voters showed up in King County’s traditionally<br />

Republican suburbs. Every headline hailed the upset. What Adams<br />

most needed now was money to match his momentum, <strong>and</strong> Democratic<br />

donors opened their checkbooks. With a net gain <strong>of</strong> four seats, the party<br />

could regain control <strong>of</strong> the Senate. Frank Greer, one <strong>of</strong> the country’s top<br />

Democratic consultants, came on board.<br />

Team Gorton called for reinforcements <strong>and</strong> regrouped, shifting its focus<br />

from Gorton’s record to Adams’ record. Evans loaned much <strong>of</strong> his<br />

staff to the campaign. All <strong>of</strong> Slade’s competitive juices kicked in. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

interspersed their attack ads with more positive, senatorial messages <strong>and</strong><br />

quickly regained the lead. Excell warned, however, that things could turn<br />

on a dime if they made any mistakes. Adams certainly wasn’t making<br />

any. Whenever he l<strong>and</strong>ed a solid punch, the gap would close. 7<br />

While Reagan had helped Gorton raise $2 million, the administration<br />

was doing Slade more harm than good, sending mixed signals on the<br />

waste dump <strong>and</strong> dragging its heels on its end <strong>of</strong> the bargain over the<br />

judges. Manion had been on the bench since July. Dwyer was in limbo.<br />

Such was Attorney General Meese’s disdain that the Seattle attorney<br />

wasn’t even nominated by the White House until late September. When

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!