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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

freshman, was getting beat up on by the likes <strong>of</strong> John Goldmark, whom I<br />

immensely enjoyed debating at every opportunity just for the hell <strong>of</strong> it.”<br />

Wily John L. O’Brien, having narrowly won a record fourth term as<br />

speaker, wielded the gavel with impunity during the filibuster that staved<br />

<strong>of</strong>f HB 197 <strong>and</strong> paralyzed the House. <strong>The</strong> son <strong>of</strong> Irish immigrants,<br />

O’Brien was a deceptively affable self-made man. His father, a Seattle cop,<br />

died in a shootout when Johnny was 9. O’Brien kept a wary eye on the<br />

hive <strong>of</strong> ambitious young Republicans in his midst.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Evans team had recruited <strong>and</strong> elected more progressives, allowing<br />

Dan to score a 21–18 victory in the race for minority leader. Evans’ growing<br />

statewide reputation was burnished by his decisiveness during the<br />

fight over the power bill. In the course <strong>of</strong> four tedious days, the members<br />

were locked in their chamber “under call,” hour after hour, as the opponents<br />

resorted to every form <strong>of</strong> parliamentary jujitsu in the book <strong>and</strong><br />

some holds no one had ever attempted. <strong>The</strong>re were hundreds <strong>of</strong> amendments<br />

<strong>and</strong> 45 roll call votes. Sixty-one <strong>of</strong> the 99 members engaged in the<br />

debate, with Gorton, Evans, Hurley, Goldmark <strong>and</strong> Norm Ackley, a sharp<br />

young Democratic attorney, getting in some <strong>of</strong> the most withering licks.<br />

Goldmark said the bill was “essentially a fraud” because its proponents<br />

were hailing it as the right to vote. “Democracy,” the Okanogan rancher<br />

asserted, “is representative government. It is based on having people selected<br />

because their friends <strong>and</strong> neighbors decide somebody should be<br />

entrusted with responsibility <strong>and</strong> they send them to a place to inform<br />

themselves <strong>and</strong> make decisions. It is not a question <strong>of</strong> referring every<br />

single thing back to the people.” 3<br />

Eight exhausting hours into Day 1, Speaker O’Brien fielded a motion to<br />

advance the bill to a third reading. He ignored calls for a roll call vote,<br />

declared it defeated <strong>and</strong> banged his gavel so hard that the head broke <strong>of</strong>f<br />

<strong>and</strong> went flying, almost hitting one <strong>of</strong> the Republicans in the front row.<br />

With that, O’Brien declared “Adjourned!” <strong>and</strong> disappeared through the<br />

curtains behind the rostrum as the proponents erupted in indignation.<br />

No one had ever seen Evans so angry. 4<br />

When the battle resumed, Ackley pointed out that if private power won<br />

the first vote required by the proposed law, any future attempt by a PUD<br />

to seek a second vote or reverse the first vote would be automatically<br />

blocked. Gorton conceded the point <strong>and</strong> won some grudging new admirers<br />

across the aisle. He <strong>and</strong> Ackley drafted a clarifying amendment that<br />

passed.<br />

“I think the people for this bill are just as patient as those against it,”<br />

Gorton predicted confidently. By Day 4, however, the opponents had

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