Colorado House of Representatives In 1964, he was elected to the
Colorado House of Representatives as a member of the
Democratic Party. In 1967, he drafted and succeeded in passing the nation's first liberalized abortion law. He was an early leader of the
environmental movement, and was President of the First National Conference on Population and the Environment. In 1972, as a member of the
Colorado General Assembly, Lamm led
the movement against Denver's hosting of the
1976 Winter Olympics, as part of a group known as Citizens for Colorado's Future (CCF).
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 then replaced Denver as the host. Lamm's successful effort made him known statewide.
Colorado governor Lamm ran for
Governor of Colorado in 1974 on a platform to limit growth, and was elected. Reacting to the high cost of campaigning, he had walked the state in his campaign. As candidate and then governor, Lamm promised for environmental reasons to "drive a silver stake" through plans to build Interstate 470, a proposed circumferential highway around the southwest part of the
Denver Metropolitan Area. However, continued development in the area led to increased congestion on surface streets, and the highway was later built, largely with state funds, as
State Highway 470. In 1984, his outspoken statements in support of
physician-assisted suicide generated controversy, specifically over his use of the phrase "we have a duty to die." Lamm later explained that he "was essentially raising a general statement about the human condition, not beating up on the elderly," and that the exact phrasing in the speech was "We've got a duty to die and get out of the way with all of our machines and
artificial hearts and everything else like that and let the other society, our kids, build a reasonable life." His dire predictions for the future of
social security and health care ("duty to die") earned him the nickname "Governor Gloom". His views were satirized by noted
folk singer Tom Paxton in January 1985. Lamm was elected Colorado governor three times. When he left office in 1987 after three terms and twelve years in the office, he was the longest-serving governor in state history (his successor,
Roy Romer, matched this record).
Later political campaigns In 1985, he announced he would not seek a fourth term as Governor or a Senate seat. In 1990, Colorado Democratic state party leaders tried to get Lamm to run for the
U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Sen.
William L. Armstrong, a Republican, but Lamm declined. In 1992 he ran for the U.S. Senate but suffered his first political defeat.
Ben Nighthorse Campbell beat him in the Democratic primary and went on to win the seat. Campbell later switched to the
Republican Party. In 1996 Lamm, while noting that he was still a registered Democrat, criticized both his own
Democratic Party and the Republican Party, saying "I think both political parties are controlled by special interest money, and I've had enough of it." and "The Democrats are too close to the trial lawyers and the
National Education Association. The Republicans are too close to the radical right." On July 9, 1996, he formally announced his intention to run for the nomination of the
Reform Party for the U.S. presidency. Less than 48 hours after Lamm announced his candidacy,
Ross Perot, who built the Reform Party from his
United We Stand America organization, said he would run as the Reform Party nominee if drafted. In early August, Lamm picked former California Republican congressman
Ed Zschau, a high-tech millionaire and proven fund-raiser, to be his running mate on his would-be presidential ticket. Ultimately, however, Perot won 65.2 percent of the 49,266 votes cast by party members nationwide, Lamm winning just 34.8 percent. ==Writer and novelist==