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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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the counciL <strong>of</strong> tRent 305<br />

South had been managing two <strong>of</strong> Bill Clinton’s gubernatorial campaigns.<br />

Right after the Democrats’ disastrous 1994 midterms, Clinton confided<br />

his frustrations to Morris, who convinced him to open a back-channel<br />

dialogue with Lott. Two instinctive Southern politicians who wanted to<br />

get things done ought to be able to find common ground, Morris said.<br />

When Lott invited Morris to his home in Pascagoula for a chat before<br />

Congress convened, Morris revealed he’d been talking with Clinton.<br />

“This could be great,” Morris said. “You take over the Senate, I’ll take over<br />

the White House <strong>and</strong> we’ll pass everything!” Morris was only half joking.<br />

He became the intermediary between the president <strong>of</strong> the United <strong>State</strong>s<br />

<strong>and</strong> the majority leader <strong>of</strong> the opposing party. <strong>The</strong> relationship even survived<br />

Morris’s embarrassing exit from Team Clinton over revelations that<br />

he had a paid mistress <strong>and</strong> some kinky proclivities. <strong>The</strong> Council <strong>of</strong> Trent<br />

<strong>and</strong> the White House agreed to the Balanced Budget Act <strong>of</strong> 1997 <strong>and</strong> a<br />

major welfare reform initiative, with Gorton as a key strategist. 2<br />

indiAns And enviRonMentALists were dismayed to find Gorton with<br />

more power, especially as chairman <strong>of</strong> the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee,<br />

which oversees the budgets for the Bureau <strong>of</strong> Indian Affairs<br />

<strong>and</strong> Forest Service. In fact, all <strong>of</strong> Interior’s agencies, including Fish &<br />

Wildlife, the National Park Service <strong>and</strong> the Bureau <strong>of</strong> L<strong>and</strong> Management,<br />

were now Gorton’s turf. His hope was that the 104th Congress would<br />

move to amend the Endangered Species Act to allow social <strong>and</strong> economic<br />

concerns as part <strong>of</strong> the equation. He was prepared to play the budget card<br />

“if we don’t start moving down a path <strong>of</strong> meaningful reform.” 3<br />

Gorton was even more adamant after the National Marine Fisheries<br />

Service announced its biological opinion on the cost <strong>of</strong> increasing water<br />

flows on the Columbia <strong>and</strong> Snake Rivers to help save endangered fish.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lost hydropower penciled out to at least $120 million a year. <strong>The</strong> head<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Bonneville Power Administration expected overall costs to be<br />

closer to the $175 million to $180 million estimated under a salmon plan<br />

prepared for the Northwest Power Planning Council. “We figure that each<br />

saved Chinook would cost its weight in gold,” Gorton said. Northwest ratepayers<br />

would have to decide whether saving the salmon was worth that<br />

much. “When almost everything else is being cut,” Congress was unlikely<br />

to foot the bill. “<strong>The</strong>re is a cost beyond which you just have to say very regrettably<br />

we have to let species or subspecies go extinct.” 4<br />

On the Elwha, the question was nearly moot. Impressed by a compromise<br />

forged by a Port Angeles citizens group, Gorton helped secure $30<br />

million in 1997 to buy the lower dam on the Olympic Peninsula river. He

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