gubernatorial hopeful, Fieger has been
doing well in the polls, given his name recognition, much to the chagrin of some party
faithful who dont want him as their standard-bearer. [Detroit News, 5/31/98]
Fieger recently told TV viewers that "for the first time you are
going to get somebody (1) who is highly qualified and (2) who is going to tell it like it
is, for no other reason than I believe its time for a citizen patriot to step
forward and do something right."
When he announced his candidacy in April, he said, "I am not for
death. I am not for assisted suicide." Later he told those listening that his first
act as governor would be to get rid of any assisted-suicide ban that the Legislature
passed. [AP, 4/17/98]
Sparks really started to fly, though, after Fieger fired his campaign
manager, Sam Riddle, an African American Detroit lawyer with a successful political
campaign track record. Fieger fired Riddle after one month, calling him a
"lunatic," "erratic," and "absolutely insane," and claiming
that Riddle had verbally assaulted a woman in Fiegers office. "You can go ahead
and call me a racist and a bigot," Fieger said, "and it doesnt matter. If
you assault women in my office, I will stand up and fire you."
But Riddle did not go down quietly. Instead , he showed up unexpectedly
at a Fieger press conference, telling reporters, "The truth is that Geoffrey Fieger
is a lying hypocrite." "Geoffrey Fieger brought me aboard because he knew that
he needed Detroit, Detroits overwhelmingly black vote. Geoffrey Fieger was looking
for a token black to head up his campaign; what he found was that Im not a
token," Riddle said. "The guy is a bully who does not have the temperament to be
governor," Riddle added. [Oakland Press, 5/21/98; Detroit Free Press,
5/21/98; T. Bray, Detroit News,5/31/98]
Cecelia Henderson, a friend of Riddles, had a loud, verbal
exchange with Fieger at the press conference. She said that she had been a campaign
volunteer for Fieger until she found out the details of a fight Fieger had with his wife.
"
Hawaiis Blue-Ribbon Panel on Living and Dying, an 18-member
panel which reportedly studied end-of-life issues for 18 months, will submit its report to
the governor, urging the legalization of both assisted suicide and euthanasia. "If an
individual wants to live as long as medical professionals allow them to, as technology
allows them to, thats perfectly all right," explained panel chairman Hideto
Kono. "But for those who really feel that theyve reached a point where they
want to pass on, we dont want our system to prolong his death," he said.
But panel member Patricia Lee, a registered nurse and author of the
groups dissenting report, said the panel did not study the implications of
legalizing assisted suicide or euthanasia. "It is apparent," she said,
"that in light of these highly critical public issues, that the legalization of
physician aid in dying must be opposed as the potential dangers associated with its
legalization surpass any perceived advantages that may be anticipated in certain
cases."
State lawmakers also warned that the legalization of both practices
would be difficult if not impossible. Senate Health Co-Chairman Andrew Levin (D, Kau-South
Kona) said, "I think it would have to be done extremely carefully, if at all, and
with some guarantees and safeguards that I cant imagine how we would craft for it to
be sufficient." During the last legislative session, six euthanasia and
assisted-suicide bills were introduced, but not one got a public hearing.
The governors blue ribbon panel did manage to agree on one thing:
All members voted to oppose involuntary euthanasia. [Honolulu Star-Bulletin,
5/28/98]