Richard Douglas "Dick" Lamm (born September 12, 1935 in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American politician and lawyer. He served three terms as Governor of Colorado as a Democrat (1975–1987) and ran for the Reform Party's nomination for President of the United States in 1996.
Education
Lamm obtained his law degree in
1961 from the
University of California, Berkeley. In
1969 Lamm joined the faculty of the
University of Denver.
Political activities
In 1972, as a member of the
Colorado General Assembly, Lamm led the movement against
Denver's hosting of the
1976 Winter Olympics. Denver had already been awarded the games, but the movement succeeded in cutting off public funding for the games, forcing the city to cancel its hosting.
Innsbruck, Austria replaced Denver as the host.
Lamm was elected as Governor of Colorado in 1974. When he left office in 1987, he was the longest serving governor of the state. In 1984, his outspoken statements in support of physician-assisted suicide generated some controversy, specifically over his use of the phrase "we have a duty to die". One of his acts as governor was designating folk music poet John Denver as the Poet Laureate of Colorado.
Novelist
In 1985, while still in the governor's office, he tried his hand at published fiction as a novelist. The resulting novel,
1988, was a story about a former Democratic governor of Texas running for
U.S. President on a
populist third-party ticket, declaring himself a "progressive conservative." The main character bore a number of similarities to Lamm himself, in his stated political positions, his background as a Democratic governor, as well as presaging Lamm's own unsuccessful run for the Reform Party nomination in 1996. Interestingly, though, the main character in
1988 was also portrayed as a pawn of an international conspiracy to capture the White House.
Activities since leaving political office
After leaving office, Lamm has continued to speak publicly on
environmental,
immigration reduction, and
health care issues. In 1996 he unsuccessfully challenged
Ross Perot for the nomination of the
Reform Party as U.S. President. In
2004 he unsuccessfully ran for a seat on the Board of Directors of the
Sierra Club. He serves as the Chairman of the Advisory Board of the
Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), and on the Board of Directors of the
Diversity Alliance for a Sustainable America (DASA). He is
currently the Co-Director of the
Institute for Public Policy Studies at the University of Denver. He is also a
Certified Public Accountant. His most recent book is
The Brave New World of Health Care, a criticism of current United States health care policies and proposals for reforming them. (Fulcrum Publishing, ISBN 1555915108)
In 2005, a 2004 speech of his on the dangers of multiculturalism in the United Stated entitled "I Have a Plan to Destroy America", became famous after being frequently forwarded as an email.
External link
1935 births | Living people | American lawyers | Governors of Colorado | Members of the Colorado House of Representatives | People from Wisconsin | United States presidential candidates | American humanists