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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

looked more like a rancher than a lawyer because that’s what he was.<br />

Goldmark, his vivacious wife Sally <strong>and</strong> their two young sons had ab<strong>and</strong>oned<br />

the East for a ranch with no electricity in the wilds <strong>of</strong> Okanogan<br />

County after John saw combat in the South Pacific as a U.S. Navy <strong>of</strong>ficer<br />

during World War II. 4<br />

Goldmark had served three terms in the <strong>Washington</strong> Legislature <strong>and</strong><br />

was chairman <strong>of</strong> the powerful House Ways & Means Committee. “John<br />

Goldmark philosophically was everything I<br />

wasn’t,” Gorton says. “He was not only a<br />

Democrat, he was quite a liberal Democrat.<br />

I loved to debate him in the House because<br />

he was an eloquent speaker. He was the best<br />

spokesman the Democrats had.”<br />

Gorton <strong>and</strong> Goldmark were <strong>of</strong> similar<br />

temperament, Dwyer said. “Impatient <strong>of</strong><br />

the foolish <strong>and</strong> venal, Goldmark lacked the<br />

statehouse politician’s air <strong>of</strong> genial mediocrity.”<br />

Emmett Watson, Seattle’s favorite columnist,<br />

always recalled that when he first<br />

met Goldmark “he seemed prickly <strong>and</strong> im-<br />

patient; too questing, too dem<strong>and</strong>ing; no<br />

time for small talk.” When Watson introduced<br />

Goldmark to his college-age daughter,<br />

he asked her all sorts <strong>of</strong> probing questions<br />

about her goals, hopes <strong>and</strong> dreams.<br />

“Well, what did you think <strong>of</strong> him?” Watson<br />

<strong>State</strong> Rep. John Goldmark,<br />

a Democrat from Okanogan,<br />

in 1961. <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />

Archives<br />

asked that night. “I think he’s the kindest man I’ve ever met.” “How so?”<br />

“Because he was taking a genuine interest in me.” 5 If she had met Gorton,<br />

she might have said the same thing. Smart young people bring out the<br />

best in him.<br />

In the 1962 Democratic primary, Goldmark was challenged from the<br />

right in his own party. Donations from the private-power lobby, the John<br />

Birch Society <strong>and</strong> other arch-conservatives boosted his opponent. Frontpage<br />

stories <strong>and</strong> editorials in the local weekly br<strong>and</strong>ed him a pinko. Albert<br />

F. Canwell, the celebrated 1940s communist hunter from Spokane,<br />

appeared at a forum sponsored by the American Legion to warn the locals<br />

that the godless Marxist-Leninist menace was burrowing into their midst.<br />

Canwell revealed a skeleton in Sally Goldmark’s closet. Years before<br />

meeting John, when she was an idealistic young New Deal worker during<br />

the Depression, she had joined the Communist Party. One night when

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