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George Keverian: Power, personality, wit

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  • George Keverian: Power, personality, wit

    Boston Globe, MA
    March 10 2009


    George Keverian: Power, personality, wit

    By Michael Goldman
    March 10, 2009

    AT LEAST once a month at the State House, someone would ask me if I
    knew how former House speaker George Keverian was doing. These
    inquiries were always sincere, yet laced with a certain sadness that a
    power, personality, wit, and intelligence as large as George's could
    just fade away with nary a sound.

    Sadly, this was a choice George made himself, for reasons he kept to
    himself. Phone calls from old friends, colleagues, and staff often
    went unanswered, invitations to breakfast or lunch ignored.

    It wasn't that George totally disappeared. On the smaller stage of
    Everett life and politics, his shadow always loomed large. Up to his
    sudden death last week, he remained Everett's favorite son.

    But it was in the halls of the State House where George Keverian made
    his mark. He knew more about the boundaries of all 160 House Districts
    than did any other member. His personality and wit made him the most
    desired politician to host or address local political events. And he
    remains the only one to engineer and implement a campaign that toppled
    a powerful sitting House speaker.

    George rarely crossed the State House's thresholds after his loss for
    state treasurer in the 1990 Democratic primary. When he did
    occasionally emerge from his self-imposed Boston isolation, such as
    his spectacular appearance at a gala event honoring former governor
    Michael Dukakis a half decade ago, the brilliance and ferocity of his
    wit was once again on display. As one former Dukakis staffer mused
    last week, "Mike Dukakis was never more liked or likable than when
    under the withering wit of Keverian. In the most devastatingly
    humorous manner, every Michael tick or mannerism was fair game, and
    every Dukakis idiosyncrasy seemed to become a winning asset."

    Anyone lucky enough to have known him, of course, has their favorite
    "George" story.

    The year I worked for him during the speaker's battle in 1984, he sent
    me every story he could find about someone who had died while
    running. "Nobody ever died sitting on the couch," he claimed, "and
    it's the exercise that's killing these people. Seriously, show me a
    single story where someone died just sitting on a couch, minding their
    own business."

    The truth was that George, known by many for his constant struggles
    with his weight, was a champion runner in high school, a little known
    fact of which he was quite proud.

    And then there was George, the guy known to be tight with the penny,
    but who loved poker and always carried more than a little cash with
    him.

    One day I asked him why he always seemed so well heeled. Without
    missing a beat he responded, "I figure someday someone is going to try
    and rob me. I figure if they get a lot of money, they'll be so happy,
    they'll run away as fast as they can. They'll be happy, and I'll be
    fine. Worth every cent, don't you think?"

    That was George - always thinking.

    Finally, there was the call I got from George while we were both in
    Atlanta during the 1988 Democratic convention. George, who had a fear
    of flying, was at a facility that specialized in helping folks
    overcome their phobia by putting them in the pilot seat of a simulated
    flight taking off from then National Airport in Washington. The idea
    was to show how safe and simple flying really was.

    Keverian called my hotel room and left the following message:
    "Michael, Charlie (Charlie Flaherty, then the House majority leader)
    is going to be 'sooo' happy. I'm dead." Click.

    It turned out that during the simulated takeoff, with George at the
    controls, the plane had smashed into the Washington Monument, killing
    all on board, the first, and as far as I know, the only time this had
    ever occurred.

    Only George.

    Those who mourn George today share the bond of understanding that they
    knew a gentle, sensitive man touched by the Gods with greatness and
    yet bedeviled by never fully understanding what his intelligence, his
    gracefulness under pressure, his humor and his friendship meant to
    others.

    Michael Goldman, senior consultant with the Government Insight Group
    in Boston, served as political consultant during Keverian's successful
    battle for House speaker in 1984.

    http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial _opinion/oped/articles/2009/03/10/george_keverian_ power_personality_wit/
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