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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

course <strong>of</strong> this evil.” He cites the example <strong>of</strong> a farsighted lobbyist who created<br />

a multi-billion dollar green industry in <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong>.<br />

the nAtionAL pRohiBition Act died in 1933 after 14 controversial years.<br />

Its thirst quenched by brazen rumrunners <strong>and</strong> moonlighting cops, <strong>Washington</strong><br />

had been one <strong>of</strong> the least compliant states in the nation. With the<br />

repeal <strong>of</strong> the 18 th Amendment, states were then given considerable leeway<br />

in regulating the manufacture <strong>and</strong> sale <strong>of</strong> alcoholic beverages. “It’s influence<br />

that they have over nothing else that goes into interstate commerce,”<br />

Gorton notes.<br />

Regulation <strong>of</strong> wine sales was fiercely debated during his 10 years in the<br />

Legislature. An array <strong>of</strong> trade restrictions against California wines, buttressed<br />

by court decisions <strong>and</strong> huge markups, protected the tiny “domestic”<br />

producers, which remained mired in muscatel mediocrity. Most wine<br />

drinkers dismissed <strong>Washington</strong> wines as ghastly stuff that only a wino<br />

could swallow. Every session, the California wine growers would lobby<br />

for repeal <strong>of</strong> the exclusionary legislation, to no avail until they hired Tom<br />

Owens, aka “Tommy Raincoat,” a lawyer Gorton, Evans <strong>and</strong> a host <strong>of</strong> other<br />

legislators admired for his honesty. “Tom lobbied for them on the up-<strong>and</strong>up,”<br />

Gorton says, <strong>and</strong> finally convinced the Legislature in 1969 that competition<br />

wouldn’t destroy the <strong>Washington</strong> wine industry, it would transform<br />

it. “I know <strong>of</strong> no presentation in any legislative body in which I ever served<br />

that has more totally <strong>and</strong> completely kept its promise than that one.” 2<br />

In his second term, Gorton was the principal sponsor <strong>of</strong> legislation<br />

placing stiff restrictions on billboards along major highways. He had<br />

strong support from Evans <strong>and</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> Democrats, including Wes<br />

Uhlman. At 26, Uhlman was one <strong>of</strong> the youngest legislators in America<br />

<strong>and</strong> a future Seattle mayor. Gorton agreed with Ladybird Johnson, the<br />

First Lady, that billboards are a blight on the American l<strong>and</strong>scape. Unimpressed<br />

was Alfred Hamilton, a Lewis County farmer who belonged to<br />

the John Birch Society. He erected a billboard along Interstate 5 that featured<br />

Uncle Sam exposing an ever-changing litany <strong>of</strong> liberal plots to undermine<br />

American values.<br />

goRton’s ReputAtion for parsing every bill became legendary in the<br />

Legislative Building. Dick White, the state’s longtime code reviser, said<br />

the funniest backh<strong>and</strong>ed compliment his staff was ever paid came courtesy<br />

<strong>of</strong> Slade, who “came in with blood in his eye one day <strong>and</strong> just raised<br />

the ro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> my <strong>of</strong>fice because there had been a comma misplaced” in a<br />

public power bill. [H]e accused us <strong>of</strong> deliberately doing it. And <strong>of</strong> course I

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