POLITICOS ARE DEAD WRONG ABOUT THIS MOUNTAIN MAN
The last thing Zell
Miller needs is to have me springing to his defense. Zell can take care
of himself, thank you very much. But he has taken a couple of gratuitous
shots recently that I feel need further commentary.
First, state Sen.
Regina Thomas (D-Savannah) was quoted in news reports as saying that
while she approved of a statue of Miller being added to the Capitol
grounds, she was doing so “in spite of what appears to be senility and
erratic behavior the past couple of years” on Miller’s part. The story
goes on to say that her comments “brought laughter” from the audience.
I’ll just bet that the audience was members of the Georgia General
Assembly. They are very familiar with laughter. They know we laugh at
them every day.
In fairness to Sen.
Thomas, I was not there to see if her tongue was planted in her cheek
when she made her remarks, but I am going to assume she was serious and
will therefore attribute her zingers to the fact that she hasn’t spent
much time around mountain men like Zell Miller. Mountain men are not
senile and erratic. They are cantankerous and short-tempered, and they
suffer fools poorly. Sen. Thomas wouldn’t know this because there are no
mountains in Savannah.
Then there was Bobby
Kahn, the recently retired chairman of the state Democratic Party, who
told veteran political observer Bill Shipp in an interview that his
advocacy of Zell Miller to replace the late Paul Coverdell in the U.S.
Senate turned out to be "a huge disappointment." Kahn didn’t indicate
where that disappointment ranks with his others, such as managing Roy
Barnes’ well-financed re-election campaign into the dumper and losing
the governor’s office to an underfunded Republican state senator named
Sonny Perdue.
Besides, Kahn has
only himself to blame for Miller’s success. If only Kahn could have
persuaded Miller to let him run Miller’s special election campaign for
the remainder of Coverdell’s term, Zell would probably have finished
third in a two-person race. Without Kahn’s help he won 60 percent of the
vote.
You have heard from
Thomas and Kahn. Now hear from me: With Zell Miller, what you see is
what you get. There is not a phony bone in his body. He is as direct as
a beeline. I know up close and personal. I was responsible for dealing
with the state and federal governments during my tenure with the Atlanta
Committee for the Olympic Games, which put me in regular contact with
then-Gov. Miller. There were times when Zell wasn’t terribly pleased
with our organization and he let me know in fifty words or less. Over my
career, I have had my hide peeled by the best, but you don’t know what a
major-league hide-peeling is until Zell Miller gets hold of you.
Political pundits
have tried to make a big deal out of the fact that Miller somehow
changed when he went to Washington. He didn’t change. Washington did. He
didn’t like what he saw when he got there, and he said so. If the
national Democrats were looking for a sycophant, they were sorely
disappointed. Mountain men don’t march to anybody’s drum.
Of course, Zell
Miller’s enduring legacy will be the HOPE scholarships he created while
governor. Since the lottery-funded program began in 1993, HOPE has
provided more than $3 billion for tuition, fees and book allowances to
some one million Georgia students attending the state’s public
universities or technical colleges. Thanks to HOPE, our brightest and
best kids are staying in the state and getting a quality education. The
positive impact that HOPE has had on higher education in Georgia is
immeasurable, and it came on Zell Miller’s watch.
That is why they are
going to erect a statue to Zell Miller. He has earned it with a
distinguished political career and outstanding contributions to Georgia.
Take my word for it: Regina Thomas and Bobby Kahn are dead wrong. Zell
Miller is not senile, erratic or a disappointment. He is a ferociously
independent mountain man who does things his way — like it or lump it. I
happen to like it.
Download
Printer-Friendly Version Here
((Must have Acrobat Reader
installed... click
here for a free download!)