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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

finally cornered him <strong>and</strong> asked if they could talk. “I’m not in public life<br />

anymore,” Gorton snarled. “I don’t have to talk to you.” With that, he<br />

turned on his heel <strong>and</strong> walked away. A year later, Partlow went to Seattle<br />

for Gorton’s first interview about the Senate race. “He could not have<br />

been friendlier. We went to a nearby restaurant, just the two <strong>of</strong> us sitting<br />

there on a mid-morning weekday, chatting like long lost friends at a table<br />

with a red-<strong>and</strong>-white checkered tablecloth. It was like right out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

1950s.” After Partlow wrote about the new Gorton, Mike Oakl<strong>and</strong>, who<br />

edited the editorial page, hooted that he had gone in the tank for Slade.<br />

With McGavick in tow, Gorton even had dinner with Joel Connelly, his<br />

on-again, <strong>of</strong>f-again bête noire. Before the salad arrived, Slade <strong>and</strong> Mickie<br />

Pailthorp, an activist lawyer who was the love <strong>of</strong> Connelly’s life, became<br />

absorbed in a free-wheeling discussion on the fine points <strong>of</strong> all things<br />

legal, as well as U.S. policy in the Balkans <strong>and</strong> dog-training, leaving Connelly<br />

<strong>and</strong> McGavick to talk politics. 23<br />

“McGavick was right. I was a lousy listener,” Gorton says. Losing<br />

something he valued so dearly had a salutary effect. “I learned a lot.”<br />

theRe wAs ALso A new Lowry—a makeover even more striking than the<br />

kinder, gentler Gorton. Bob Shrum, a sought-after Democratic consultant<br />

<strong>and</strong> speechwriter, told Lowry to lose the scraggly beard that the Seattle<br />

version <strong>of</strong> Saturday Night Live said made him a leading contender in<br />

the Yasser Arafat Look-Alike Contest. And he couldn’t pound the table or<br />

wave his arms like a cross between Huey Long <strong>and</strong> Joe Cocker or deliver<br />

his bug-eyed battle cry—“We’re right <strong>and</strong> they’re wrong!” That wasn’t<br />

senatorial. 24<br />

In the course <strong>of</strong> one summer’s day, Gorton could be seen driving a<br />

miniature Model T at the Pacific County Fair while Lowry was giving a<br />

staid speech in Aberdeen in a h<strong>and</strong>some pinstripe suit. Like an awkward<br />

Irish step dancer, he kept trying to remember to keep his arms at his<br />

sides. But he was still the same small-town guy who grew up among the<br />

amber waves <strong>of</strong> grain on the Palouse, Lowry stressed; still a passionate<br />

supporter <strong>of</strong> “all those working-class folks” depending on Social Security<br />

for their retirement. Gorton wanted to balance the budget on the backs <strong>of</strong><br />

senior citizens, Lowry said, <strong>and</strong> now he’s making $250 an hour as a lobbyist—“a<br />

total <strong>of</strong> $60,000 <strong>of</strong> taxpayers’ money to push conversion <strong>of</strong> a<br />

WPPSS plant into a weapons-production reactor.” As Lowry got the hang<br />

<strong>of</strong> being more dignified, it served him well. He was an engaging, naturalborn<br />

politician with a solid base in the state’s largest, increasingly blue<br />

county. Gorton <strong>and</strong> McGavick never once underestimated him. 25

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