Inaugurated on January 20, 1987, Casey was immediately confronted with several serious issues.
Budd Dwyer, the state treasurer who had been convicted on charges of accepting
kickbacks, committed suicide at a televised press conference just two days into his term. Casey brought what he called an "activist government" to Pennsylvania, expanding health care services for women, introducing reforms to the state's
welfare system, and introducing an insurance program for uninsured children (which became a model for the successful
SCHIP program later adopted nationwide). House Bill 20, entitled the Children's Health Insurance Act, created the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in Pennsylvania. According to PA's CHIP website, "Pennsylvania's CHIP program would later be used as the model for the federal government's SCHIP program. Legislation for the federal CHIP program was signed into law August 5, 1997, by former president
Bill Clinton." Casey also introduced a "capital for a day" program, where the state's official business was conducted from eighteen different communities throughout the state. Despite charges that his administration squandered a budget surplus and ran the state into record annual budget deficits, Casey remained popular with voters, easily winning re-election in
1990 against abortion-rights Republican nominee
Barbara Hafer. Polling data showed that abortion attitudes were a stronger predictor of vote choice than party affiliation.
Abortion Governor Casey was well known as a staunch Roman Catholic
anti-abortion advocate. and said in a series of news conferences the party was censoring his anti-abortion views even though he agreed with the party on nearly all other issues. And after a speech by another abortion-rights supporter from Pennsylvania, DNC supporters actually sent a camera crew in search of Casey to humiliate him. After the convention, convention organizers tried to say that Casey was not allowed to speak because he did not support the Democratic ticket.
Al Gore called Casey the next day to apologize. Casey in his memoir correctly claimed that convention speaker
Kathleen Brown had not endorsed the ticket due to bitterness over her brother
Jerry Brown's losing the nomination. Despite holding out for a while, and even vowing to promote his own party platform even a few days prior to the start of the convention, Brown had come to quietly support the Clinton ticket as the convention got underway. Several anti-abortion Democrats such as
John Breaux addressed the convention, though did not speak directly on the issue of abortion. After the convention, Casey went on vacation rather than campaign for Clinton in Pennsylvania, which was a key swing state. He also refused to say whether he would campaign for the Democratic nominee, though he told
The New York Times, "I support the ticket. Period." Several anti-abortion Democrats spoke at the convention, but they did not focus their remarks on abortion, and the issue was not debated the way that Casey had wanted. on the death penalty. Governor Casey during his term signed 21
execution warrants, but none of those were carried out, and upon entering office in 1987, dissolved a death warrant signed by his predecessor
Dick Thornburgh, five days before it was stated to occur. Casey would be forced to sign two death warrants after May 1991, after a lawsuit was brought by Northampton County District Attorney
John Morganelli. The court ruled in
Morganelli v. Casey, that Casey did not have the power to ignore death warrants. Pennsylvania resumed executions once Casey's successor,
Tom Ridge, took office. On November 29, 1990, Governor Casey signed a bill that eliminated the
electric chair as a method of executions in Pennsylvania and replaced it by
lethal injection.
U.S. Senate politics On April 4, 1991, Casey was faced with filling a vacancy in the
U.S. Senate when Republican U.S. Senator
John Heinz died in a plane crash. After briefly considering appointing
Chrysler Corporation Chairman
Lee Iacocca, an
Allentown native, Casey settled on state Secretary of Labor and Industry, and former
Kennedy functionary
Harris Wofford (despite private fears that he was too liberal for rural Pennsylvania voters).
Health issues In October 1987, Casey suffered a heart attack and underwent quadruple
coronary artery bypass surgery. Though rare, the disease had also claimed the lives of
Pittsburgh Mayor
Richard Caliguiri and
Erie Mayor
Louis Tullio in 1988 and 1990, respectively. To combat the disease, he underwent an extremely rare heart-liver transplant on the morning of June 14, 1993, at the
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Before undergoing the operation, he transferred executive authority to
Lieutenant Governor Mark Singel, marking the first time Pennsylvania was under the leadership of an
acting governor. Casey resumed his duties on December 13, 1993, almost six months to the day after he underwent the operation. Following his operation, Casey strongly supported legislation that encouraged organ transplants by guaranteeing access to the families of potential organ donors by organ recovery organizations, providing drivers' license identification of potential donors, and establishing an organ donation trust fund from voluntary donations to promote the benefits of organ donation. The organ donation trust fund was named in his honor. ==Post-political career and death==