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To: ColtonGang who wrote (86074)11/23/2000 5:48:59 PM
From: ColtonGang  Respond to of 769670
 
Final tally gives Democrat lead in Washington
Senate race

November 23, 2000
Web posted at: 5:41 AM EST (1041 GMT)

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) -- For decades, Republican Sen. Slade Gorton has
managed to win statewide office by conceding King County, which includes
heavily Democratic Seattle, and concentrating on the rest of the state.

After 40 years in public office, the strategy seems to have failed the veteran
politician who trailed his opponent in the nation's last undecided U.S. Senate
race.

With all 39 counties reporting final tallies
late Wednesday, Democrat Maria
Cantwell edged Gorton by 1,953 votes
out of more than 2.4 million.

Gorton, 72, did not concede but
described himself as "cautiously
pessimistic." He said he would await the
recount, which begins Monday.

Cantwell, 42, all but declared victory: "I
look forward to this challenge and the
process that is still yet to take place in
the next several weeks."

Under Washington law, a recount is automatic when an election margin is less
than 0.5 percent, which would be about 12,000 votes in this case.

Cantwell, who became a dot-com millionaire after getting bounced from
Congress in 1994, came from behind after 700,000 absentee votes were
counted. It was Seattle and the rest of King County that put her over the top.

She had courted Seattle and the surrounding communities during her campaign.
Gorton, 72, seemed to stiff-arm the state's largest city, running his campaign
from Bellevue, where he also has his Senate office.

In the end, she carried just five counties and he won 34.

Cantwell had 1,199,260 votes, of 48.7 percent, to 1,197,307, or 48.6 percent,
for Gorton, who was seeking a fourth term overall and third in a row.

Secretary of State Ralph Munro said a recount would begin Monday and take
about a week to complete. He said no recount in recent state history had
reversed the outcome of a certified vote count.

A Cantwell victory would create a rare 50-50 tie in the Senate, at least until the
presidential race is decided. It also would give the state two female senators for
the first time and two Democrats in the Senate for the first time since the 1970s.

A victory by Gorton would preserve the Republican majority in the Senate,
regardless of the outcome of the presidential election and the political fate of Sen.
Joseph Lieberman, the Democratic vice presidential candidate.

A new term for Gorton would assure Republicans of 51 votes in the new Senate,
while Democrats have 49.

If Cantwell wins and Lieberman becomes vice president, Connecticut Gov. John
Rowland would appoint a Republican to fill the vacated seat, leaving the GOP
with a narrow 51-49 majority.

If Texas Gov. George W. Bush wins the White House and Dick Cheney
becomes vice president, Republicans would still maintain nominal control of the
Senate. But a protracted negotiation would likely ensue before the two parties
came to terms on the allocation of committee seats as well as staff funding.