Talk:Evan Mecham

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Lost right to host Super Bowl

Does anyone have a better reference to Arizona losing a Super Bowl than the Jeffery Scott webpage? I have been looking through old newspaper archives in an attempt to find more information and am starting to think that any Super Bowl that was lost had to have occurred when Mecham was not in office.

The most obvious candidate for lost hosting rights was Super Bowl XXV which was awarded to Tampa Bay on 20 May 1987 (Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".). The problem with this possibility is Super Bowl XXV had no Arizona city was among the list of candidates that submitted a bid for hosting the game (The original list of candidates were San Diego, Los Angeles, Pasadena, San Francisco, Anaheim, Dallas, Miami, New Orleans, Tampa, Jacksonville, and Houston with Seattle also considering a bid — Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".). Super Bowls XXI, XXII, XXIII, and XXIV were all awarded to cities outside of Arizona before Mecham was elected to office and are thus not candidates for the lost Super Bowl either. (Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".).

So this leads to the question, If none of the Super Bowls that were awarded before Mecham took office and played after he was inaugurated were move from Arizona, and there were no Arizona cities seeking the Super Bowl hosting rights that were being discussed while Mecham was in office, how could he have been personally responsible for the state not receiving a Super Bowl? If no one can find a better reference stating which Super Bowl was lost and giving attribution for the loss to Mecham, I am going to chalk this up as an urban legend and remove the claim from the article. --Allen3 01:43, 14 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Expanding my search a little more turned up the following articles:
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These two articles indicate that Super Bowl XXVII was conditionally awarded to Phoenix in 1990 and moved to Pasadena because the ballot initiative to create a paid MLK holiday was not passed by the voters. As these activities took place well after Mecham was out of office, it would appear to clear him of having lost the state a Super Bowl. --Allen3 talk 02:27, 14 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

As there have been no comments one way or the other about Mecham's involvement in loosing a Super Bowl, I have removed the information about the loss from the article. I have also removing the estimate of $500 million economic as it includes the loss of the 1993 Super Bowl making the estimate as much about the state's MLK Day as it does with Mecham. --Allen3 talk 13:01, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

The loss of the Superbowl should probably be mentioned, but I agree with you that the wording that was there was probably not terribly good. The Super Bowl XXVII page has the event accurately depicted: since AZ (in 1990) was the only state without MLK day, due to pressure the NLF moved Superbowl XXVII. Mecham gets blamed since he canceled the MLK holiday that had been created by Executive Order.
As a resident of AZ at the time Mecham was in Office, I remember that losing the Superbowl was a distinct concern when he canceled it, but I'd like to find a better reference than my own memory before putting that in. I'll have to check through my stacks of old New Times and Tribunes to see if I can find something. -- Kaszeta 14:10, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Having grown up in Tucson, and even having signed one of the recall petitions, I have similiar memories to yours. I do not have a problem with a mention of the Super Bowl XXVII move from Phoenix as long as there are some good sources (try the two Thomas George for a starting point). Let's just try not to smear Mecham with any negatives that he does not deserve when there are so many that he does deserve;-). --Allen3 talk 15:20, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Martin Luther King Holiday

Although I was not living in Arizona at the time, I am currently an Arizona resident, and I recall the controversy over Governor Mecham. I am glad that the article points out the Martin Luther King holiday was improperly ordered by the preceding Governor, and that Evan Mecham was doing no more than fulfilling the law when he "canceled" it. Of course, the way he went about it, and his goofy comments on that and other issues, caused all his problems and eventually led to his impeachment, conviction, and removal from office. If "terminal stupidity" is an impeachable offense, then the Legislature had plenty of cause. John Paul Parks (talk) 21:56, 23 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

External links modified

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External links modified

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External links modified

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External links modified

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Impeachment, recall and criminal indictment

I know that Evan Mecham was the only governor in Arizona State history to be removed from office by impeachment[1], but I also remember the news at the time saying that he was the only US governor to every be under threat of recall, impeachment, and indictment; all at the same time. Does anyone know of reference sources for this? Thanks C. W. Gilmore (talk) 11:30, 19 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

External links modified

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