A rare word from Zell Miller: ‘I had a late life conversion’

Buford, Ga. – There was no mistaking the man who walked through the glass doors of the hotel complex on the shores of Lake Lanier.

The trademark shock of white hair remains neatly groomed. The hawk-like nose still juts out over a tight jaw. The eyes are clear and bright. But the stride is gone. Zell Miller walks gingerly now, always with a cane.

The former governor and U.S. senator describes himself as an 80-year-old man with 100-year-old legs. “I very, very seldom go anywhere,” Miller said in an interview.

Former governor and U.S. senator Zell Miller autographs copies of his 2005 book "A Deficit of Decency" at a Buford fundraiser for 9th District congressional candidate Doug Collins on Friday/SPECIAL

Former governor and U.S. senator Zell Miller autographs copies of his 2005 book "A Deficit of Decency" at a Buford fundraiser for 9th District congressional candidate Doug Collins on Friday/SPECIAL

In fact, Miller’s appearance on Friday was a rare return to a world he once commanded. He’d come down from the hills of Young Harris as the featured attraction at a fundraiser for state Rep. Doug Collins of Gainesville, now a Republican candidate in the 9th District congressional race.

His grandson, Bryan Miller, is Collins’ campaign manager. “Of course, he brought his grandfather with him, but I would have been there anyway,” the former governor said. “My grandmother was a Collins out of Union County. And I was impressed by what a good legislator [Doug Collins] made. “I felt I had a mountain relationship with him.”

Miller’s abrupt disappearance from the scene has been one of the greatest vanishing acts in Georgia political history. At the tail end of his U.S. Senate years, still in the shadows of 9/11, Miller broke lifelong ties with many of his Democratic friends and endorsed the re-election of President George W. Bush.

Miller, who had given the keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in 1992, played the same role for Republicans in 2004 – damning Democrat John Kerry for his alleged plans to fight world terrorism with “spitballs.”

The last glimpse that most Georgians had of Miller was his vein-popping, post-speech interview with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews. “I wished we lived in the day when you could challenge a person to a duel,” Miller snapped that day.

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The combative Miller left Washington without regret only a few months later. Since then, he’s made a few brief appearances here and there. A handful of candidates like Collins, mostly Republicans, have captured his still highly valued endorsement. Miller recently lent his name to Newt Gingrich’s presidential run.

But the interviews and public speeches became part of a life left behind.

“I don’t hear from anybody much,” Miller said. “I stay away from the limelight and politics and all that.”

One reason has been his health. “About three years ago, I got shingles. I broke out from my toes – big blisters all the way up to my hip. And it left me somewhat disabled, and I had two big falls. I fell down a flight of 13 stairs, all the way down them. Broke five ribs, two of them very badly, collapsed a lung, and pushed my heart over to the middle of my body more,” the former governor said.

“That really crippled me up. And then about two months later, I fell again and broke my back. And so I have really been stove up, as we say in the mountains.”

Until now, he has kept his constant pain a private matter. He’s had a small electronic device implanted in his back. “When the pain gets so bad I just can’t stand it, I’ve got a little remote – like a TV remote. I can mash that, and it kind of blurs the pain some,” he said.

The former governor credits his wife Shirley for keeping him on track.

He reads the Journal-Constitution every day, delivered via his Kindle. He keeps a sharper eye on Atlanta than Washington. “I love state government. I pay close attention to how Nathan [Deal] is doing. And I’m thinking he’s making an excellent governor. I knew he would,” he said.

Miller, who served as governor when a Democratic City Hall and a Democratic state Capitol operated in utterly separate worlds, is fascinated by the working relationship between Deal, a Republican, and Mayor Kasim Reed, a Democrat.

As governor, Miller’s greatest achievement was the creation of a state lottery and the HOPE scholarship that it funds. But he has no problem with the Republican Legislature’s recent decision to “de-couple” HOPE scholarship payments from college tuition rates. No longer does one fully cover the other.

“I don’t think they had any other choice. We knew back in the ‘90s that there would be adjustments. This came as no surprise,” Miller said. Nor did he blink at the decision by state lottery officials to approve the sale of tickets through the Internet.

“I’m okay with that. In fact, we wrote the lottery law so you could do that,” he said. But as for that plan to create a casino with machines operated by the Georgia Lottery Corporation, Miller said he’ll let others decide that.

It is tempting to write that Miller, one of the most confrontational politicians ever to haunt the Capitol, has mellowed. And it is true that Miller is interested in rebuilding some of those bridges that have been burned over the years.

But it would be more accurate to say that Miller has turned inward. At times, he is his own harshest critic. Take that 2004 televised confrontation with Matthews.

“That was terrible. I embarrassed myself. I’d rather it had not happened,” Miller said. “But Chris Matthews is not one of my favorite people.”

For those who have tracked Miller’s career, one of the greatest unanswered questions has been the source of his last rightward turn. What sparked not only his admiration for President Bush, but turned him into a strict opponent of abortion and a harsh critic of this nation’s social mores?

Religion, Miller said. “I had a conversion. I had a late life conversion. I changed my views on several things. This had to do with my son going blind, and me having to carry him to the doctor with his hand on my shoulder,” Miller said. This was in the early 2000s. His son, Matt, had been a lifelong diabetic.

“I prayed and prayed that they could do something about his sight,” Miller said. The prayers seemed to work. “He can see pretty good out of one eye right now.”

But a bargain struck with God often transforms the petitioner more than the object of any plea. “I changed on a lot of things. Not just abortion, but my whole life in general. I was a pretty rough character in my younger days. I needed to change,” Miller said.

- By Jim Galloway, Political Insider

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181 comments Add your comment

Simeon Namore

July 22nd, 2012
8:22 am

Don’t make fun of the retarded, it’s not polite.

amazing

July 22nd, 2012
9:05 am

Its amazing how people re-write the Bible and History to suit their own needs and political preferences.

Jo

July 22nd, 2012
9:12 am

Zell is one of the reasons why Georgia is not a great state on so many levels and cannot be until we have thinkers and people who care about healthcare and education for people. I am glad that he possibly has mellowed……but its too late for the ill he did to so many.

Holy Guacamole

July 22nd, 2012
9:19 am

An amazing prediction written nearly 50 years ago. Some of you are old enough to remember Paul Harvey.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJc8Mzg0C-c&feature=player_embedded

Interesting…….

ClassAction

July 22nd, 2012
9:25 am

The liberal critics never mind being reckless with the truth. We all have our flaws. Hope Zell lives out his life in peaceful, contented enjoyment, sustained by his faith.

Look before I leap...

July 22nd, 2012
9:40 am

@ Holy Guac

Note that the version you link to was actually from 1996.
It was adapted from an earlier essay from 1964.
Harvey’s prediction powers are not as amazing as you think.

Shine

July 22nd, 2012
9:43 am

He’s a literal kook.

Rhett Butler

July 22nd, 2012
9:46 am

Frankly, my dear, I dont’ give a damn.

Devildog

July 22nd, 2012
9:52 am

Mediocre Lt. Gov. ? Zell spearheaded Georgia’s concealed carry law. He’s a hero. Just another ole Marine sergeant doing his job.

cliff

July 22nd, 2012
9:53 am

One of the finest men Ive ever known. Id follow him down a rabbit hole any day for any reason. True American!

Wrongfully Convicted

July 22nd, 2012
9:55 am

Zell needs to help undo the horrible acts him and WAYNE GARNER did in the 90,s to prisoner,s in Georgia. They ordered numerous beatings on inmates just like the one.s continuing today. Georgia needs to come out of the dark ages and stop neglecting education, the elderly and enslaving prisoners! WHERE IS THE US ATTORNEY GENERAL?

Love the Democracy

July 22nd, 2012
9:55 am

Miller is a turncoat, an opportunist and a traitor to all those people who toiled and invested in him because he represented their causes. Not only did he abandon the Democratic Party, he stuck a knife deeply in its back. No wonder he supports Deal. Deal did the same thing to the party that cultivated him.

detritusUSA

July 22nd, 2012
10:02 am

zig zag Zell. Karma is tough isn’t it? Good thing you and your family are wealthy, and also have your government pensions and health care to take care of you. That stuff you got when you were a Democrat, and had a heart. Once you got it, you turned republican and said screw everybody else, I’ve got mine. Live long Zell.

Billie Edwards

July 22nd, 2012
10:18 am

Ward and I have always loved and admired Zell Miller. There is no way to please all the people all the time and I think he did enough to right a wrong that he might have made. If he didn’t do any more than the Hope Scholarship and the Lottery , we all should know how this state has benefited from these 2 things.alone.. He came to Taylor County and dedicated a bridge that was named for my husband by the DOT. He loved this state and her people. Why not give him the respect he deserves!

Centrist

July 22nd, 2012
10:26 am

Billie Edwards posted about Zell Miller “He loved this state and her people. Why not give him the respect he deserves!”

This is a very liberal blog website with many frustrated socialists and malcontents who do not even slightly represent the vast majority of Georgians (a few posted here) who do respect Zell Miller.

At Long Last

July 22nd, 2012
10:38 am

Zell has outlived the dead serial child molester, who died of cancer, he helped protect along with Judge Gail Flake and former DeKalb Sheriff Pat Jarvis. I went to the FBI about this and they did nothing. Later, I was told by Children of the Underground founder, Billie Faye Yager, that Zell was going to have me “prosecuted” by the FBI for saying “bad” things about him. Karma is real.

hiram

July 22nd, 2012
11:20 am

centrust said:

“This is a very liberal blog website with many frustrated socialists and malcontents who do not even slightly represent the vast majority of Georgians (a few posted here) who do respect Zell Miller.”

Unfortunately, centrust does represent the majority of registered voters in Georgia, who, like him, are apparently incapable of analytical thinking. They are programmed from birth to follow the herd, and never question the authority of those doing the herding. Gerogia’s insipid herd has been branded with an R, and they will follow the R brand where ever it takes them – even over a cliff.

double

July 22nd, 2012
11:21 am

Zell makes rare public apperance-Just not rare enough.

DannyX

July 22nd, 2012
11:31 am

Hopefully Zell is well enough to give another speech at the Republican convention. The speech would probably go something like this…

“We need a Mormon President with magic underwear! A man with a silver spoon. A president who is unafraid to ship more jobs off to China. A president that understands the American way of evading taxes using foreign bank accounts. A man who will make the Bank of the Cayman Islands the official bank of the USA. A president who understands profits over people. A president that can lie without flinching. A president who understands that Jesus loves the rich and hates the poor. America, Mitt shares your values, you must vote for Romney!”

John Haeger

July 22nd, 2012
12:06 pm

Good that Zell has repented. But his legacy lingers on in Carol Hunstein, the jurist who never grew out of constituency advocacy. Take a look at her “ink-is-never-dry-on a divorce order” opinion opposing “finality” in Williams v Williams. Can’t find it on line ? Not surprising. You’ll probably have to look in the printed opinions of the Ga Supreme Court.

Or take a look at how Carol led Georgia into Federal contract fraud, claiming to be a qualified grantee for Federal Financial Participation in State Programs of Child Support Administration when Carol’s 3 Commissions each declined to comply with Federal Regulations, leaving the state unqualified to apply. But that’s Women’s Law as promulgated by Carol.

Too bad Zell can’t rethink that appointment.

Huge Bullbone

July 22nd, 2012
12:18 pm

I have read all 170 posts on this article and have had both an education on Zell and Georgia politics during his time AND a lot of really good laughs. I have NEVER enjoyed reading comments from such a diverse group of folks and their thoughts, ideas, and beliefs as much. I even picked up a new term: Teapublicans. I now believe old Zig Zag has a lot in common with one of my personal favorites “The Turtle Man” on cable TV. How bout dem dawgs?

Miss Georgia

July 22nd, 2012
12:19 pm

Zell, with all his recent illnesses and falls, is paying for all the wrong he’s done in this life. Too bad, he’s too old and senile to see it.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

July 22nd, 2012
12:35 pm

@A Libtard in ATL

hmm..shut up? nah..But I will give you props for self identifying as a liberal in Atlanta..that makes you about as popular as the HIV virus in a gay bath house…but far less potent.

Avery Bundren

July 22nd, 2012
12:56 pm

Zell Miller was always an irascible, thin-skinned, paranoid politician. I have never liked him as I always saw him as a self-aggrandizing opportunist. His public performance during his years in the US Senate definitely fed the red-neck, good ol’ boy image that Georgia too often exudes. I do not wish him ill, but I cannot say I wish him well.

Larry

July 22nd, 2012
1:36 pm

Ken Stallings,

You and I have had our differences on sports related things, but today you are welcome at my dinner table.

Larry

Joesnopy

July 22nd, 2012
1:45 pm

People it is all about the money for Zell. He sold millions of dollars worth of books when he switched to the GOP side. I said it then and I see now I was right. He did the same tham Newt, Palin, Cain and all the other GOP except for Ron Paul did when they ran for President on the GOP side. They ran to sell books.

Rotunda $haquonda 0bama

July 22nd, 2012
1:56 pm

To hell with Zell. To hell with commie lib democrats.

Kris

July 22nd, 2012
2:18 pm

Thank you zig zag, for setting the stage for Georgia to be last in education.

Hope is all but gone gone . The governor (term used lightly) Let the Board of regents and the colleges run rapid with tuition cost and salary raises for the presidents and vice presidents. Passing to cost to students in forms such as
The tuition increase is bad but the additional fee’s ($20 to pay by credit card $30 Debit, $200 Institutional Fee . $50 for lawnmower gas , $45 to wash the presidents car etc

Yet another record for GA to be proud of.

Regulators closed two metro Atlanta banks on Friday
Eighty-two Georgia banks have now failed since mid-2008, more than in any other state.
Gave too mant Graves/Rigers loans

Thank you Zig Zag!
Vote the crooks out?
If it is a question on the Ballot be safe VOTE NO!

Kris

July 22nd, 2012
2:22 pm

Oops my bad

Gave too many Graves/Rogers loans.

Hugo

July 22nd, 2012
2:42 pm

Seems like people change more on their views and laws when something tragic happens to a family member or close friend. Just saying.

Denver

July 22nd, 2012
2:55 pm

There are sure some vile responses from all these, I’m sure, nice people (not).