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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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who’d take the magazine out <strong>of</strong> his h<strong>and</strong> when he needed to talk with people”<br />

rather than surrounding himself with policy-oriented staffers. Dave<br />

Adams, a spokesman for the state GOP, noted that Gorton had worn sweaters<br />

<strong>and</strong> gone tie-less during the 1980 campaign against Magnuson. Dark,<br />

senatorial suits on his lean frame now made him look stiff. 4<br />

goRton Left it to the pundits, <strong>and</strong> they had no shortage <strong>of</strong> opinions.<br />

Lou Cannon, the White House correspondent for <strong>The</strong> <strong>Washington</strong> Post,<br />

said it was bogus to blame Reagan for Gorton’s defeat. <strong>The</strong> president<br />

wasn’t about to say anything more about Hanford than he did, Cannon<br />

said, <strong>and</strong> the Gorton campaign had only itself to blame for fanning the<br />

flames by inviting him to the state. David S. Broder, another widely read<br />

columnist, said the broader issue was the damage to civility. “All across<br />

America voters have been inundated in a tidal wave <strong>of</strong> negative TV ads<br />

which have polluted the atmosphere, cheapened the dialogue <strong>of</strong> democracy<br />

<strong>and</strong> guaranteed that whoever wins <strong>of</strong>fice this year, the public has<br />

been cheated <strong>of</strong> its chance to hear its would-be leaders address the issues<br />

they must face.” Broder pointed to the “essentially unconstrained flow <strong>of</strong><br />

cash into congressional campaigns” <strong>and</strong> the ascendancy <strong>of</strong> consultants<br />

<strong>and</strong> their pollsters. 5<br />

Newman believes, however, that “if something is important, the American<br />

people know it, regardless <strong>of</strong> what campaign pr<strong>of</strong>essionals advise.<br />

<strong>The</strong> tail does not wag the dog.”<br />

As a lifelong baseball fan, Gorton had to chuckle if he saw Martin Nolan’s<br />

analysis in the Boston Globe. <strong>The</strong> 1986 campaign reminded Nolan <strong>of</strong><br />

Mickey Mantle’s next-to-last home run. In the twilight <strong>of</strong> his career, legs<br />

aching, the Yankee slugger stepped to the plate against the Detroit Tigers<br />

in September <strong>of</strong> 1968. Denny McLain was on the mound for the Tigers.<br />

With a 6-0 lead, he was feeling mischievously magnanimous toward the<br />

future Hall <strong>of</strong> Famer making his last appearance in Detroit. McLain<br />

strolled to within a few feet <strong>of</strong> the plate <strong>and</strong> in a stage whisper told Bill<br />

Freehan, the catcher, “Let’s let him hit one.” Mantle turned to Freehan<br />

<strong>and</strong> asked, “Is that right?” Freehan nodded. When McLain delivered a<br />

juicy fastball down the middle, Mickey sent it soaring for his 535 th homer.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Detroit crowd cheered.<br />

When their eyes met as Mickey rounded third base, McLain winked.<br />

Watching intently from the on-deck circle was Joe Pepitone, who strode to<br />

the plate, waved his h<strong>and</strong> in the middle <strong>of</strong> the strike zone <strong>and</strong> said “Right<br />

here!” McLain promptly knocked him down. <strong>The</strong> explanation to the puzzled<br />

Pepitone was simple: “You ain’t Mickey Mantle.”

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