SALEM, Ore. — Bill Bradbury isn’t just running for Oregon governor. He’s zipping — on a Segway.

Using the personal transporter is one way the Democratic politician deals with the effects of multiple sclerosis. He was diagnosed with the disease 30 years ago, but that hasn’t stopped him from becoming one of the most exuberant and popular figures on Oregon’s political scene.

Tall and lanky, he glides into campaign events on his electric standup vehicle, his booming laugh often heralding his arrival.

The disease has affected his physical skills, he says, but not his mental abilities or his capacity to govern.

“I get energized by the challenge of this campaign,” he says. “I really feel like the disability doesn’t interfere with my ability to serve the people of this state.”

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society in New York says Bradbury is the only candidate with MS running for a statewide office in 2010 that it knows of. Spokeswoman Arney Rosenblat said the group is delighted Bradbury deals openly with his condition.

“He certainly is a role model, particularly for people who are newly diagnosed with MS and may be uncertain about their future,” Rosenblat says. “It’s important for them to see that they can fulfill their potential and pursue their dreams.”

She notes that Bradbury isn’t the only officeholder with MS to achieve prominence, citing two former members of Congress, Sen. Paul Wellstone of Minnesota and Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas. A current member of Congress, Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy of Ohio, was diagnosed with the disease in 2003.

read the rest via The Associated Press: Oregon candidate uses Segway to help deal with MS.

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