
Richard “Dick” Lamm, a three-term Colorado governor from 1975 to 1987, died of complications from a pulmonary embolism July 29. He was a week away from his 86th birthday.
Lamm was a Democrat who earned his law degree from UC Berkeley, served in the Army and became an attorney for the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission. After leaving elected office, he became executive director of the University of Denver’s Center for Public Policy, and wrote several books.
During his 12 years as governor, Lamm spoke out unflinchingly about the issues most important to him: protecting the fragile environment, defending women’s rights and promoting common-sense immigration.
Lamm, who criticized overdevelopment and the relentless sprawl it spawns, opposed Interstate 470, a proposed circumferential highway around the Denver metropolitan area.
Years later, and because of never-ending development, the highway was built. Today, Denver has some of the nation’s most congested highways, and much of Colorado’s open spaces are a distant memory as housing projects have paved over what was once rural land.
Lamm knew and loved Colorado’s countryside; in 1974, running on a campaign to limit growth, he walked across the state to promote his platform.
Because federal immigration policy adds millions of new residents to the United States’ population annually, Lamm, unlike many Democrats with similar academic and professional credentials, bluntly criticized those policies as ill-conceived, destructive to the environment and harmful to low-wage American workers.
In 2003, Lamm gave his most widely known speech, “I Have a Plan to Destroy America.” At the time, Congress had passed the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 and the Immigration Act of 1990.
Republican Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush had signed the two legislative acts that opened the borders to more illegal immigration, and created more employment-based visas that, over the last three decades, helped displace millions of American low- and high-skilled workers.
Presciently, Lamm foresaw immigration’s growing, detrimental effect on the United States, as well as the amassed power that its advocates had on Congress and the news media.
Lamm’s eight-point program, which he subtitled “and many parts of it are underway,” include, despite multiculturalism’s multiple global failures, making America a bilingual, bicultural country; encouraging immigrants to maintain their own language and culture instead of, as previous immigrant waves did, assimilating; ensuring that the fastest growing demographic is the least educated, thereby creating a second, permanent underclass; and getting big business and powerful foundations to donate huge sums of money toward promoting ethnic identity, victimology and diversity.
His most compelling point noted that all of his above observations must be treated as “off limits … taboo.” Make sure that opposition is squelched on unfounded xenophobe and racist charges that end debate.
Because immigration was “once good,” Lamm predicted its advocates would insist that it “must always be good.” He anticipated that the immigration-related problems he identified in 2003 would grow worse over the years to come.
Although often at odds with Lamm, especially about immigration, the Denver Post’s editorial board wrote a mostly gracious commentary about him, and referred to him as “a kind, humble and generous man … a man of conviction … whose policy on immigration was drastically different from that of the modern Democratic Party …”
I knew Lamm from several Washington, D.C., conferences where we met, began and maintained a friendship. On a trip to Denver years ago, he and his wife, Dottie, invited me to their home for dinner. Dottie, once a Senate candidate, Dick and I spoke about his 2003 speech, and bemoaned how much of it had come true.
Lamm enjoyed a long, full life. In an era in which most politicians speak double talk or test which way the wind blows before addressing a crowd, he spoke his mind even when he knew his foes were ready to pounce.
As The Post wrote: “Colorado will be poorer without him here offering his unvarnished and genuine takes on the most important policies of our time.”
Lamm’s many allies in the uphill climb for stable, sustainable population and manageable immigration will deeply miss his strong, rational voice. The fierce battle that he predicted will be more challenging without him.
— Joe Guzzardi is an analyst and researcher with Progressives for Immigration Reform who now lives in Pittsburgh. He can be reached at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org, or follow him on Twitter: @joeguzzardi19. Click here to read previous columns. The opinions expressed are his own.

