16.07.2014 Views

booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

second deep-brain surgery. I’m sitting in the taxi, staring at the door to the hospital, hoping<br />

I can get my life back.” From there, he’d take the reader on a flashback to his childhood<br />

“and all those curve balls.”<br />

Less than 24 hours after the second surgery, he was heading home. He felt<br />

incredibly better. “All the outward symptoms <strong>of</strong> Parkinson’s had disappeared – magically,<br />

medically or miraculously. What did it matter? For the first time in 10 long years, I felt like a<br />

whole person again.”<br />

“It was a raging success,” Gardner told Dave Ammons. “The doc said, ‘I hit a home<br />

run with you.’ ” Having watched his decline with sadness, the longtime AP reporter was<br />

amazed by the results <strong>of</strong> the second surgery. “I’m on one-fifth the amount <strong>of</strong> medicine I<br />

was on before,” Booth bragged. “You might see a couple <strong>of</strong> clues about the disease, but<br />

most <strong>of</strong> the time you wouldn’t know I had Parkinson’s. I am calm. My temperament is even.<br />

I’m not hammered with drugs.” He said he’d been told he probably had “a good 10 years<br />

left” and he wanted to make the most them. Gardner turned 70 on August 21, 2006. It was<br />

a far happier birthday than the year before.<br />

* * *<br />

The morning after Booth announced his “last campaign” on TVW, he called Laird<br />

Harris, his former policy adviser. Harris had founded a public affairs consulting firm in<br />

Seattle after leaving the governor’s <strong>of</strong>fice in 1987. “I’d been working with him on education<br />

issues, so we talked <strong>of</strong>ten, but I had no idea he was thinking about ‘a Death With Dignity’<br />

campaign until that call,” Harris says. “It was typical Booth in many ways.” He’d get an idea<br />

and run with it, recruiting old friends and making new ones. Soon, some <strong>of</strong> the Northwest’s<br />

most successful Democratic campaign operatives joined the cause. Harris, an accomplished<br />

cat-herder, kept them on track.<br />

The two national organizations lobbying for “physician-assisted dying” expressed<br />

immediate interest in joining the effort. Their cause had met with little success other than<br />

in Oregon, where voters had narrowly approved a “Death With Dignity” ballot issue in 1994.<br />

Three years later, they soundly rejected a move to repeal it, and in 2006 the U.S. Supreme<br />

Court, on a 6-3 vote, ruled that Attorney General John Ashcr<strong>of</strong>t had overstepped his<br />

authority in seeking to punish Oregon physicians who prescribed drugs to help terminally ill<br />

patients end their lives. At the time <strong>of</strong> Gardner’s announcement, a major effort was being<br />

made to get an Oregon-style aid-in-dying law through the California legislature. Having a<br />

popular ex-governor lead a campaign in <strong>Washington</strong> was a potential breakthrough.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the first questions Booth had to weigh was whether he wanted to run his<br />

own campaign or get involved with the already organized groups and their state affiliates.<br />

Booth, Cynthia and Laird attended a getting-to-know-you meeting with representatives <strong>of</strong><br />

the groups in Seattle in late February. Robb Miller, the executive director <strong>of</strong> Compassion &<br />

Choices <strong>of</strong> <strong>Washington</strong>, was there, together with Dr. Tom Preston, a member <strong>of</strong> his board.<br />

Barbara Coombs Lee and Kathryn Tucker represented the group’s national <strong>of</strong>fice, which<br />

165

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!