A day after three former U.S. presidents paid tribute to Zell Miller, a pair of his successors as governor presided over an executive state funeral for their friend at the state Capitol.
During a solemn ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, Gov. Nathan Deal and former Gov. Sonny Perdue bid farewell Wednesday to the former U.S. senator and two-term governor who launched the state’s HOPE scholarship.
“To the family, let me just say thank you for being a part of his life, for being a part of the fabric that has made,” Deal said, fighting back tears, “made our state great.”
Perdue, who was elected to the first of two terms in 2002, said Miller’s rise in Georgia politics heralded “the beginning of a new era” for a state that was just muscling into its own.
“Georgia was still really coming out of the old vestiges of the Depression, and many people still considered Georgia a backwater state,” said Perdue, who is now President Donald Trump’s agriculture secretary. “He put Georgia on the rails to become a modern state.”
It was the last of three public memorial services for Miller, who died Friday at the age of 86. He was honored at a ceremony in his hometown of Young Harris on Monday, and former Presidents George W. Bush, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton each eulogized Miller on Tuesday at an Atlanta church.
Those earlier services were emotional but tinged with humor. Carter quipped about his "off and on" friendship with his sometime rival. And Bush joked about Miller's high approval rating, saying, "Take it from me, that's not typical for a politician."
Wednesday’s service, which began with a procession as “Georgia on My Mind” played, felt more formal. It was held in the Rotunda under tight security — Georgia State Patrol officers cordoned off parts of the building — and soft sobs could be heard when a bugler sounded taps from a balcony.
“In these sort of occasions, you like to tell funny stories and anecdotes about what happened. With Zell Miller, there weren’t many funny times — it was all business,” Perdue said. “If you were summoned to the second floor” — where the governor has his office — “you better be ready.”
That happened to Perdue once when, as a state senator, he shifted money from a budget proposal that would have benefited Savannah’s port. Miller was furious.
“I got called by the governor,” Perdue said. “… That money got put back in, as you might imagine.”
The Capitol Rotunda was crowded with dignitaries who wanted to give Miller a last sendoff. U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson and former U.S. Sens. Sam Nunn and Max Cleland were there. So were former aides and advisers to Miller. Dozens of others in the quiet halls of the statehouse craned their necks to try to take in the ceremony.
At its end, Miller’s wife, Shirley, and his son led a long procession out of the Capitol and into waiting cars, accompanied by music from a bagpipe. The former governor’s remains were whisked to Cumming, where the family held one final service — this one in private.
Some back at the Capitol were left struggling for words.
Said Perdue: “What do you say about the man who gave Georgia hope?”
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