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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

that they couldn’t tip their h<strong>and</strong> too early when the voting for speaker got<br />

under way. O’Brien was already anxious. Don’t give him a chance to call<br />

a time-out <strong>and</strong> regroup. <strong>The</strong>y’d spring the trap on the third ballot.<br />

poKeR-fAced, the RepuBLicAns filed into the House chamber at high<br />

noon. “Day or O’Brien?” the gantlet <strong>of</strong> reporters asked. “No comment.”<br />

“How long ago did you decide who you’d go for?” “No comment.” As they<br />

were taking their seats, Dick Morphis discovered he’d been relegated to<br />

the back despite having more seniority than Pritchard <strong>and</strong> Gorton, the<br />

newly appointed assistant floor leader. “So in the midst <strong>of</strong> this huge<br />

stress,” Slade was stunned when “Rigor” bounced down the aisle in a snit<br />

<strong>and</strong> complained to Evans that he deserved a better seat. Normally a model<br />

<strong>of</strong> affability, Pritchard snapped, “Shut up, Dick, <strong>and</strong> get back to your seat<br />

or I’ll deck you!” Morphis turned pale <strong>and</strong> scurried back to his seat. Gorton<br />

stifled a chortle.<br />

O’Brien sat in the back row. His thin smile betrayed his anxiety. Day<br />

<strong>and</strong> Perry were uncharacteristically dour. Copel<strong>and</strong>, the Republican whip,<br />

dem<strong>and</strong>ed the doors be locked. O’Brien, Day <strong>and</strong> Evans were duly nominated<br />

for speaker in speeches testifying to their wisdom, integrity, infectious<br />

congeniality <strong>and</strong> love <strong>of</strong> state <strong>and</strong> country. On the first ballot, the<br />

Republicans cast all 48 <strong>of</strong> their votes for Evans. O’Brien received 45, Day<br />

six. On the second ballot, the Republicans held ranks. O’Brien lost a vote<br />

when Bill O’Connell, a Democrat from Tacoma, defected to Day. Just before<br />

the third ballot, a worried O’Brien approached Hurley, who had nominated<br />

Big Daddy for speaker.<br />

“How can you do this to me, Maggie?” O’Brien said, palms uplifted.<br />

“I didn’t do it to you, John,” she said. “I did it for my voters.” 7<br />

Out <strong>of</strong> the corner <strong>of</strong> his eye, O’Brien saw Day’s smirk <strong>and</strong> realized<br />

there was no use talking to him either. “By this time, word <strong>of</strong> the impending<br />

confrontation in the House had swept through the Capitol like wild<br />

fire.” <strong>The</strong> Senate had recessed to take in the drama across the marbled<br />

hall. <strong>The</strong> galleries <strong>and</strong> wings were packed. 8<br />

Evans swiveled in his seat to nod to Alfred O. Adams, sitting one row<br />

back. “Doc, it’s time,” Evans said. Silver-haired, portly <strong>and</strong> dignified, Adams<br />

was a retired orthopedic surgeon. His name was first on the roll call. It<br />

galled the hell out <strong>of</strong> him to be voting for a chiropractor—a Democrat<br />

chiropractor, no less—for speaker <strong>of</strong> the House, but he was a trouper.<br />

<strong>The</strong> clerk will call the roll:<br />

“Adams?”<br />

“Day!” Doc boomed out. Heads whirled <strong>and</strong> the galleries gasped. <strong>The</strong>

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