Politics

An essential primer for legislators

A new legislator praises a book that explains how it all works in Olympia, harking back to "the decade our American Democracy worked."

An essential primer for legislators
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Ashli Blow

A new legislator praises a book that explains how it all works in Olympia, harking back to "the decade our American Democracy worked."

Last  year, in preparation to become a legislator, I asked Sen. Slade  Gorton for a reading list. It consisted of one book, at the time still  in manuscript: Politics of the Possible: The Decade our American  Democracy Worked, by Mary Ellen McCaffree and Anne McNamee Corbett (Island Penworks, 2011, 443 pages). There  is much in the book about State Rep. Gorton, as well as State  Rep. and then Gov. Dan Evans, and House Speakers John L.  O’Brien and Bill Day and Don Eldridge. It is most of all the story of  Mary Ellen McCaffree, a good lady who represented Seattle in the State  House from 1963 to 1970.

The book is extraordinary. It is not  just the history of an institution during an eventful period. It is the  best reader a citizen could find on how a legislature works. It is a  day-by-day account of lawmaking — on the floor, in the caucus room, in  committee, at late-session-late-night gatherings off campus, back in the  district. Its content is well-lived and well-documented, the beautiful  record of a grand process. Its message is as American as they come:  citizens can make a difference.  

McCaffree herself came to  politics during the League of Women Voters movement to require periodic  legislative redistricting. When she arrived in Olympia in 1962, she  became part of the state’s first redistricting project. And on her first  day as a legislator, a remarkable coalition of minority Republicans and  dissident Democrats ousted the Speaker of the House John O’Brien in  favor of moderate Democrat Bill Day.

In four terms, McCaffree  became one of the most accomplished legislators in Washington state  history. As chair of the House Revenue and Taxation Committee, she led  the legislative fight for Gov. Evans’s tax reforms. She championed  the right of 18-year-olds to vote, helped to establish Washington’s  community college system, and pushed for important clean air and water  policies. Following McCaffree’s legislative service, she directed the  state Department of Revenue and led the King County budget office.

Politics  of the Possible is a record of achievement. More importantly, it is a  documentary of coalition-building, reform, and public leadership in  Washington state. “Legislating is not a solitary activity, nor is it a  task for a maverick,” McCaffree writes. “It requires teamwork, skill in  the art of compromise, an ability to listen.”

There are plenty  of politicians who have written books about their opinions on the issues  of the day, and plenty of academics who have written books about  theories and institutions, but few politicians or academics who  adequately explain what government does and why it matters.

Politicians  ought to take their own capacity to teach politics more seriously,  because they are best acquainted with the array of tensions,  complexities, decision points, rhetorical tools, myths, interests,  personalities and all-important relationships that make politics.  Precisely because all these political components are so consuming, many  politicians fail to look beyond their immediate duties to consider the  importance of relating their work to the next generation.

In  Politics of the Possible, McCaffree has done something all  too rare: the politician has become a teacher. She does this with mighty  insight. To the young person (or a person of any age) pondering how she  or he might make a difference in public life, McCaffree’s book is a  good place to start.


Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal