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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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5 | A Power Struggle<br />

<strong>The</strong> Most contentious stAnd<strong>of</strong>f in the history <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Washington</strong><br />

Legislature was all about power, literally <strong>and</strong> figuratively. For<br />

Gorton, it was “marvelous OJT” in coalition-building <strong>and</strong> in due<br />

course a game changer.<br />

House Bill 197 was introduced by Olympia Republican Harry Lewis<br />

<strong>and</strong> other supporters <strong>of</strong> private power early in the 1961 session. It m<strong>and</strong>ated<br />

a vote <strong>of</strong> the people before a public utility district could acquire the<br />

operating assets <strong>of</strong> an investor-owned utility. Gorton was the legal adviser<br />

for the proponents <strong>of</strong> “Right-to-vote,” including the Evans crew <strong>and</strong> a collection<br />

<strong>of</strong> conservative Democrats from private power districts. Notable<br />

among the Democrats were William S. “Big Daddy” Day, a 6–3, 300–<br />

pound chiropractor, <strong>and</strong> Margaret Hurley, who had “legs any chorus girl<br />

would envy.” She could be as tough as she was pretty when you got her<br />

Irish up. 1 Day <strong>and</strong> Hurley were from Spokane, home <strong>of</strong> <strong>Washington</strong> Water<br />

Power.<br />

Representative Bob Perry, another <strong>of</strong> the Democrats backing HB 197,<br />

was a business agent for the Electrical Workers Union in Seattle. Gorton<br />

<strong>and</strong> Pritchard quickly sized him up as a schemer. But he was hard not to<br />

like. It would be revealed later that Perry was also on <strong>Washington</strong> Water<br />

Power’s payroll. <strong>The</strong> PUD Association had a war chest <strong>of</strong> its own.<br />

HB 197 “precipitated the last great battle in the public-private power<br />

controversy that had been a major element in the politics <strong>of</strong> the state for<br />

over 40 years.” Dan Evans said the bill “actually was nothing more sinister”<br />

than requiring a public vote before any county could shift from private<br />

power to a PUD. But to Ken Billington, the veteran public power lobbyist, it<br />

was “a very cleverly worded piece <strong>of</strong> legislation, having all the flag-waving<br />

appeal <strong>of</strong> the right to vote.” Billington said the fine print revealed a “heads<br />

I win, tails you lose” proposal that private power dearly loved. 2<br />

Gorton, truth be told, had no abiding conviction that he was on the<br />

right team on this one. In later years, in fact, he would be a staunch supporter<br />

<strong>of</strong> public power. But it was his team, by God, “<strong>and</strong> Harry Lewis, a<br />

45

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