Former Governor of Colorado. Richard Lamm died at 85 – News2IN
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Former Governor of Colorado. Richard Lamm died at 85

Former Governor of Colorado. Richard Lamm died at 85
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Denver: Former Democratic Government Colorado Richard “Dick” lamm, who managed to struggle to stop the 1976 winter Olympics from being held in Colorado even though they had been awarded the country, had died.
He is 85 years old.
Lamm died on Thursday after complications from the pulmonary embolism that suffered this week, his wife, Dottie Lamm, said in a statement released on Friday.
Lamm presents three terms as governor from 1975 to 1987.
As a member of the state parliament and environmental activist, he campaigned against Have Denver accommodating the match in 1976, for the reason it would damage the environment and costs.
Colorado voters rejected the expenditure of state funds on the game, and they were transferred to Innsbruck, Austria.
Denver then provides an initiative that requires voter approval for each Olympic in the future.
Lamm once said that he was treated as “Pariah” by the business community during the affair, but he was afraid of the game economically and the environment destroyed.
Legas Lamm included the Landmark abortion rights law and the ratification of the state of the amendment which was equivalent in 1972.
The proposed amendment finally fell several countries with ratification.
He also pointed to the first woman to the State Supreme Court.
“The Governor of Lamm takes difficult problems, and he has never avoided civilian political discourse and adheres to collaboration,” said the democratic government of Jared Polis on Friday.
“Lamm’s inheritance and leadership.
Lamm will be remembered in the history of our country and his work made Colorado a more amazing place.” Lamm was born on August 3, 1935, in Madison, Wisconsin.
He received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin and a Bachelor of Law degree from the University of California, Berkeley.
He also served in the US Army.
In 1962 he became a lawyer for the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission, and from 1965-1974 has his own legal practice.
He and his wife, Dottie, were married in 1963.
Dottie Lamm was a women’s rights activist and former Denver Pos Columnist.
Dick Lamm functions as a representative of the country from 1966 to 1974 before becoming a governor.
He was chosen to be three terms, before Colorado limits the governor to two terms in the office.
He ran unsuccessful for the Senate nomination a.s.
to replace Sen.
Wirth team.
In 1996, he was looking for a president’s nomination for the Reform Party, losing to Ross Perot of Texas.
Lamm swept Colorado’s politics as idealist John F.
Kennedy but many years later nicknamed “Governor Gloom,” a realist who focuses on the nation’s future.
As a legislator, he pushed one of the first Pre-Roe abortion laws.
Wade.
It becomes a national model.
“I decided that it might be the end of my career, but it seemed to be outrageous that you would force a woman who didn’t want to have an unwanted child,” said Lamm to the Associated Press in the interview in 1996.
“I can’t fight with what What I believe is.
” Lamm spends most of his last term as governor writes and talks about the fiscal responsibility of his generation and what he calls the need to control immigration and reducing programs such as social security.
He opposed the death penalty as governor but supported him after leaving the office.
“For the 12 years he was the Governor, he became more conservative, and I thought the reason he became more conservative was because he learned the reality of government and the reality that managed the government financially,” Nancy Dick, Later’s Lieutenant Lieutenant during the last two terms, remembered at the time that.
Lamm initially benefited from a democratic house to help him give legislation focused on land use, the same rights, mining severance tax and growth management.
But the wave of the Republic follows the legislature of two years into his government.
Since then, Lamm fights two hostile rooms.
The legislature is relegated again in the strength of the executive branch after deciding Lamm too far from the growth management policy.
After leaving politics, Lamm served as Executive Director of the Public and Contemporary Policy Center of the University of Denver and contemporary.
He is a fan outdoors and enjoys hiking, mountain climbing and skiing.
He and his wife have two children, Scott Hunter Lamm and Heather Susan Lamm.
Pending funeral services, said his wife.

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