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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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A house divided 287<br />

Ch<strong>and</strong>ler did the weeping. Murray took 54 percent <strong>of</strong> the vote, one <strong>of</strong><br />

four female Democrats elected to the U.S. Senate that year. Her friend<br />

from the state Legislature, Maria Cantwell, was elected to Congress, together<br />

with Jennifer Dunn, which gave <strong>Washington</strong> Republicans something<br />

to cheer about. With assists from Pat Buchanan, Ross Perot, James<br />

Carville <strong>and</strong> Bush’s own haplessness, Democrats not only reclaimed the<br />

White House, they maintained their hold on Congress.<br />

While Democrats at home <strong>and</strong> on the Hill perceived Gorton to be politically<br />

dead, he was upbeat. At the urging <strong>of</strong> Lott <strong>and</strong> the other members <strong>of</strong><br />

the Mississippian’s emerging kitchen cabinet, he once again challenged<br />

Alan Simpson for GOP whip. He lost 25-14, but Simpson’s days in leadership<br />

were numbered. Lott vowed they’d forge a majority <strong>of</strong> their own. His<br />

optimism—one part Baptist, one part Jaycees—was infectious. 9<br />

“It was difficult being in the minority with George Bush president,”<br />

Gorton told a reporter on a rainy day at the dawn <strong>of</strong> the Clinton Administration.<br />

He leaned back in his chair, plopped his old brown wingtips on a<br />

c<strong>of</strong>fee table, revealing holes in the soles, <strong>and</strong> seemed unusually sunny.<br />

“Our primary job was upholding his vetoes,” Gorton continued. “Bush<br />

was without new ideas <strong>and</strong> Reagan’s had played out. That doesn’t leave<br />

you with much room to create a message. This year has been an intensely<br />

liberating experience.” 11<br />

His fund-raising for the ’94 re-election campaign was going great<br />

guns, he said, <strong>and</strong> his staff was “terrific”—unquestionably one <strong>of</strong> the best<br />

in Congress. He was traveling home frequently, making thoughtful<br />

speeches. Seattle still had a baseball team. He loved his job.<br />

Gorton judged the new president to be an astute policy wonk <strong>and</strong> the<br />

most gifted political animal <strong>of</strong> his generation. Maybe he could solve the<br />

timber crisis. But could he control his party’s appetite for higher taxes<br />

<strong>and</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>ligate spending? He wasn’t in Arkansas any more.<br />

On condition <strong>of</strong> anonymity, a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong>’s congressional<br />

delegation told a reporter, “If Bill Clinton runs into problems, it<br />

will be with conservative Democrats in the House <strong>and</strong> Republicans in the<br />

Senate. Republicans in the House are too stupid <strong>and</strong> disorganized to<br />

make any trouble for the president.” 12<br />

If Newt Gingrich read that line he surely cackled. With a fertile, fomenting<br />

mind, he was the conservative equivalent <strong>of</strong> Che Guevara. Trent<br />

Lott had plans <strong>of</strong> his own. <strong>The</strong>y included Gorton.

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