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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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weiRd And wondeRfuL shApes 69<br />

each other’s capabilities,” McCurdy says, “so it was sort <strong>of</strong> a breakthrough.”<br />

Not that they actually liked one another, Foster makes clear.<br />

To end the stalemate over the Seattle-King County legislative districts,<br />

Gorton surrendered any claim to having a corner on piety. He <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

Greive “a weird bird-shaped district, with a major Republican stronghold<br />

in the beak <strong>and</strong> a scattering <strong>of</strong> Democratic outposts in the body.” Greive,<br />

a connoisseur <strong>of</strong> gerrym<strong>and</strong>ering, couldn’t help but admire Gorton’s<br />

h<strong>and</strong>iwork. <strong>The</strong>y both laughed at their machinations.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were five final obstacles to a compromise. One was Gorton’s<br />

proposed new 21 st District, fashioned from the growing suburbs between<br />

Seattle <strong>and</strong> Everett. Gorton <strong>and</strong> Evans insisted on protecting their favorite<br />

Democrat—Jack Dootson <strong>of</strong> Everett—by moving one <strong>of</strong> the three Democratic<br />

incumbents in his area to the new 21 st . Otherwise, Jack was toast.<br />

“Jack Dootson was the most memorable character I have ever known in<br />

politics,” Gorton says emphatically. In the throes <strong>of</strong> the 1963 redistricting<br />

debate, when the Democrats presented their alternative to Gorton’s bill,<br />

Dootson had stood to be recognized from his back row seat: “Mr. Speaker,<br />

I have examined the two bills before us. I think Representative Gorton’s<br />

bill is much more objective than my party’s bill <strong>and</strong> therefore I’m going to<br />

vote for it.” 8 Democrats exploded in outrage. Dootson was unfazed. What<br />

happened two years later is one <strong>of</strong> Gorton’s favorite stories. He tells it masterfully,<br />

pausing every few paragraphs to shake his head <strong>and</strong> grin because<br />

mere words fail to sum up how inimitable Dootson was:<br />

“A boyhood friend <strong>of</strong> Scoop Jackson when they were growing up in<br />

Everett, Jack Dootson was first elected to the Legislature in 1940 as a<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the left-wing <strong>Washington</strong> Commonwealth Federation. He<br />

was a switch engine engineer in the Great Northern lumber yards in Everett.<br />

He served one session in the House in 1941, then went into the Navy<br />

<strong>and</strong> got all the way to lieutenant comm<strong>and</strong>er during World War II because<br />

he had four university degrees. After the war, he returned to the<br />

switch engine job, got elected to the Legislature once more, then lost. His<br />

Everett district had one senator <strong>and</strong> three representatives under the old<br />

gerrym<strong>and</strong>ered system. So every now <strong>and</strong> then Jack would finish third in<br />

the Democratic primary <strong>and</strong> get elected again. He came back to the House<br />

as a result <strong>of</strong> the 1962 election. Jack was still a wild left-wing social liberal<br />

but also a huge right-wing fiscal conservative. He had two suits—1940s<br />

zoot suits, with wide lapels <strong>and</strong> baggy pants. He never threw away a piece<br />

<strong>of</strong> paper. You almost couldn’t see him behind his desk, way in the back far<br />

end <strong>of</strong> the Democratic side in the House. He stopped going to the Demo-

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