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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

that,” Slade says, “the paradox is that a good 90 percent <strong>of</strong> the industry<br />

was delighted at the result.” Paul MacGregor, who represented the At-sea<br />

Processors Association, calls Gorton “the white knight who rode in <strong>and</strong><br />

slayed the dragon <strong>and</strong> then went <strong>of</strong>f to do other work.” 9<br />

goRton’s otheR woRK incLuded educAtion. He decided in 1997 that<br />

the $11 billion directed at helping needy students would be far better spent<br />

if it was h<strong>and</strong>ed over to the states <strong>and</strong> local school districts. Give it to the<br />

people who know where the money’s really needed, he said. Let them experiment<br />

<strong>and</strong> innovate. He pointed to a program aimed at lowering grade-<br />

school class sizes by hiring 100,000 new teachers. Some schools already<br />

had small classes, Gorton said, but federal rules prevented their principals<br />

from spending the money on other programs. “I’m talking about<br />

restoring authority over this money to the people who have dedicated<br />

their lives to education.” 10<br />

Sometimes these brainstorms <strong>of</strong> his went from inception to the legislative<br />

hopper overnight. And if they died aborning—as this one did, with<br />

Clinton threatening a veto—he would regroup <strong>and</strong> attempt to recruit<br />

more allies. After brainstorming with teachers, principals <strong>and</strong> school<br />

board members from around the state at education summits, he produced<br />

“a more moderate but no less revolutionary proposal to provide federal<br />

money with fewer federal strings.” Gorton’s “Straight A’s Act” <strong>of</strong> 1999<br />

would have given the states authority to pool the budgets <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong><br />

federal programs designed to assist underprivileged kids. <strong>The</strong>re was a<br />

stick <strong>and</strong> a carrot: Schools that accepted the no-strings-attached federal<br />

money would have to produce better test scores. Otherwise, they’d be<br />

forced back into the old programs. But if their students’ grades or test<br />

scores improved, there’d be a 5 percent bonus. 11<br />

<strong>The</strong> state association <strong>of</strong> grade-school principals endorsed the plan, as<br />

did a dozen school superintendents. Senator Murray, a former school<br />

board member, was diametrically opposed. She gave it “straight F’s,” asserting<br />

that “his bill shows a complete misunderst<strong>and</strong>ing <strong>of</strong> what the<br />

federal role is <strong>and</strong> why it’s important. . . . He is saying that we’ll take away<br />

the red tape, which is very appealing <strong>and</strong> certainly sounds good to everyone.<br />

But I guarantee you this flexibility, as nice as it sounds, will mean<br />

that over time, money will transfer from low-income students to higherincome<br />

students.” 12<br />

Gorton made adjustments, inserting a provision to ensure that money<br />

from Title I, the nearly $8 billion-a-year “War on Poverty” program to

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