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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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A house divided 285<br />

Adams stuck it out. It was a sad ending, Gorton says, for someone who<br />

had once been “a brilliant <strong>and</strong> articulate person.”<br />

A house shARpLy divided, the <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Republican Party convened<br />

in Yakima in June with conservative Christian activists in firm<br />

control. <strong>The</strong> congregants immediately adopted a plank that declared<br />

“Western cultural values” superior to all others. It called for a constitutional<br />

ban on abortion, even in cases <strong>of</strong> incest <strong>and</strong> rape, denounced the<br />

U.N., the “deviant lifestyle” <strong>of</strong> homosexuality <strong>and</strong> public school classes<br />

supposedly promoting witchcraft. “This doesn’t sound like the party <strong>of</strong><br />

Abraham Lincoln,” said Congressman Morrison, who was running for<br />

governor. When King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng, another mainstreamer,<br />

told the delegates the protection <strong>of</strong> children’s rights would be<br />

his highest priority if he was elected attorney general, some booed; others<br />

stood <strong>and</strong> turned their backs. Booing shook the hall when King County<br />

Executive Tim Hill, a pro-choice c<strong>and</strong>idate for Adams’ Senate seat, declared,<br />

“I support Roe vs. Wade.” By plunging into theocracy, Hill said,<br />

the party risked relegating itself to “permanent minority status.” 4<br />

Sarah Nortz, Gorton’s daughter, was a delegate from Isl<strong>and</strong> County.<br />

“Give him one vote for guts,” she said <strong>of</strong> Hill. “It was the right thing<br />

to do.” Hill’s strategy, in fact, was to goad the delegates into outrage <strong>and</strong><br />

boost his bona fides as an electable moderate. He had a camera crew<br />

in tow.<br />

Rod Ch<strong>and</strong>ler, styling himself as the party’s presumptive Senate nominee,<br />

steered clear <strong>of</strong> abortion <strong>and</strong> the other litmus tests, focusing instead<br />

on blasting Murray as a liberal lapdog. Why was he running? “Because I<br />

love America!” A week later, however, he put on his progressive cloak <strong>and</strong><br />

said the platform was “rooted in the Dark Ages.” 5<br />

Ch<strong>and</strong>ler <strong>and</strong> Morrison were pr<strong>of</strong>iles in timidity, <strong>The</strong> Seattle Times editorialized.<br />

But “first prize for Political P<strong>and</strong>ering” went to Gorton, “presumably<br />

the leader <strong>of</strong> his party, who delivered a 20-minute keynote address<br />

without once mentioning the platform or the divisive, xenophobic<br />

principles it embraces. Instead, the senator attacked the ‘liberal media’<br />

<strong>and</strong> the Democratic Party platform.” 6<br />

Although the Blethens, who had a controlling interest in <strong>The</strong> Times,<br />

had endorsed him in every statewide race he’d run, Gorton concluded<br />

there was no longer a dime’s worth <strong>of</strong> difference between Seattle’s two<br />

daily newspapers. He viewed the Post-Intelligencer as habitually hostile.<br />

Now <strong>The</strong> Times’ “true left-wing political colors” were also on prominent<br />

display. Gorton returned fire in a letter to the editor:

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