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Rick Perry: The Democrat Years
Texas Tribune ^ | 7-14-11 | Jay Root

Posted on 08/17/2011 6:59:46 AM PDT by nixonsnose

Gov. Rick Perry, a no-apologies conservative known for slashing government spending and opposing all tax increases, is about as Republican as you can get.

But that wasn’t always the case.

Perry spent his first six years in politics as a Democrat, in a somewhat forgotten history that is sure to be revived and scrutinized by Republican opponents if he decides to run for president.

A raging liberal he was not. Elected to represent a slice of rural West Texas in the state House of Representatives in 1984, Perry, a young rancher and cotton farmer, gained an early reputation as a fiscal conservative. He was one of a handful of freshman “pit bulls,” so named because they sat in the lower pit of the House Appropriations Committee, where they fought to keep spending low.

But Perry cast some votes and took a few stands that seem to be at odds with the fiscal conservatism he champions today. The most vivid example is Perry’s support of the $5.7 billion tax hike in 1987, signed by Republican Gov. Bill Clements but opposed by most of the GOP members. The bill passed by a relatively close 78-70 in the Texas House. Even without adjusting for inflation, the legislation triggered the largest tax increase ever passed in modern Texas, according to Dale Craymer, president of the Texas Taxpayers and Research Association. Today, taking inflation into account, it would be worth more than $11 billion.

The Tribune thanks our Supporting Sponsors Craymer said the new taxes were used to plug a massive budget shortfall, with the money representing about 20 percent of the general revenue raised during that two-year budget period.

Almost a quarter century later, Perry, as governor, was faced with a similarly sized budget shortfall. But he took a markedly different tack in 2011: He opposed any new taxes, and signed a budget that made the first reduction in overall spending on public education since at least 1949.

Perry spokesman Mark Miner said votes taken decades ago don’t undermine the governor’s overall record, which he said includes the largest property tax cut in state history, enacted in 2006.

“You can pull votes from the 1980s, but the overall track record is one of fiscal responsibility and conservatism,” Miner said.

As a House Democrat, Perry also co-authored legislation aimed at tripling the amount of money state legislators are paid, House records show. In a 1989 interview with the Abilene Reporter-News, Perry cited the financial hardships Texas legislators faced trying to make a living back home while making a yearly salary of only $7,200 as part-time lawmakers. Voters rejected the proposal in a statewide referendum.

Perry said he could make ends meet only because his father tended to the farm while his wife worked as a nurse in Haskell, her hometown.

“I really don’t know how people in the insurance business or the real estate business do it. That’s one reason I voted for the pay raise,” Perry told the newspaper. “I think all the people of Texas ought to be able to serve.”

Miner said Perry no longer favored giving legislators a pay increase.

Another political move Perry made back then: He was a top Texas supporter and organizer in 1988 for Al Gore, who ran as a southern conservative rather than the populist reformer he eventually became as the 2000 Democratic presidential nominee.

“I came to my senses,” Perry likes to say when asked about his Gore days.

Perry can trace his political heritage back to a great-great grandfather, D.H. Hamilton, a former state legislator from Trinity County. Perry’s own father, Ray Perry, served as a county commissioner in Haskell County for almost 30 years. They were Southern Democrats, from the party that produced politicians like Sam Rayburn and Lyndon Baines Johnson.

In 1984, Rick Perry, then a young rancher and former Air Force pilot from Paint Creek, about 60 miles north of Abilene, was recruited by fellow Democrats to run for a House seat vacated by Rep. Joe Hanna, according to interviews and news articles. Democrat John Sharp, the former state comptroller who was Perry’s old college buddy, recalls getting a call from Clyde Wells, then the chairman of the Texas A&M System Board of Regents. Wells wondered who might make a good replacement for Hanna.

“I said: ‘Yeah, there was a guy in my outfit who’s from Haskell. Let’s find out if he’s still in the Air Force,” Sharp recalled saying of Perry. “Three weeks later he was in the race.”

Perry easily won and quickly became known as a rising star in the Texas House.

Then-House Speaker Gib Lewis, D-Fort Worth, decided to appoint several freshman lawmakers to the House Appropriations Committee — members he knew he could count on to keep spending low.

“All of them were very conservative guys and had a good head on their shoulders, and that’s how I picked 'em,” Lewis recalled. “When he first came to the Legislature it was predominately white, Democratic, conservative. He was one of them, and I was, too.”

No matter the label beside his name, the news coverage of Perry’s early years reveals the same ambition and enthusiasm for public office that the governor has brought to the national stage as a potential presidential candidate.

In one of the first lengthy newspaper profiles ever written about Perry, in the Abilene Reporter-News, fellow Rep. Cliff Johnson, now a lobbyist and longtime friend, said of the of the West Texas farm boy: “He’s one of the top two or three (representatives) of the freshman class. I think the sky is the limit.”

Perry’s wife, Anita, told the paper a few years later: “He breathes politics.”

At the beginning of his six-year run in the state House, Perry shot down the notion that he might switch parties despite his conservative leanings that put him at odds with his party leaders. After former U.S. Rep. Kent Hance of Lubbock defected to the Republican Party in 1985, Perry told the Abilene paper he was “disappointed,” saying he planned to “change my party” rather than defect to the other side.

“I want the left hand side of the party to make the right hand side of the party comfortable,” Perry was quoted as saying. Hance, now chancellor of Texas Tech University, said he remembers telling Perry, “‘Good luck on it. I don’t think you can do it.' … And sure enough he couldn’t.’’

The gap was obvious by 1989, his last year in the Legislature, when Perry carried a workers' compensation insurance bill that angered the Texas trial lawyers, then a much more powerful force in state politics. That same year The Dallas Morning News named Perry one of the state's ten best legislators, but he was ripped by another publication.

The liberal Texas Observer called Perry the “Benedict Arnold of the Democratic Party” for siding too often with Clements, the Republican governor, and not enough with his Democratic colleagues.

“If the Texas Observer ever says anything good about me, then I’ve been hit on the head and they can send me back home,” Perry quipped.

Rumors that Perry would defect to the GOP — and run against populist Democratic Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower — picked up steam by late 1989. On Sept. 29, 1989, he made it official at a Capitol press conference. At his side were GOP chairman Fred Meyer and U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm, a former Democrat who was aggressively courting would-be converts.

“I intend to vote the same convictions,” Perry said. “The only difference is there will be an R beside my name.”

Perry’s timing, now legendary, could not have been better. He was one of only two Republicans elected to nonjudicial statewide office in 1990. Eight years later, Republicans swept every one of them.

“Perry has been a risk taker,” said Hance, the party-switcher who became Texas Tech chancellor. “And if you look at Perry’s timing in every race, he’s been the golden guy.”

Chris Hooks contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: convert; exdemocrat; formerdemocrat; perry; perryrecord; realignment; rickperry; slickperry; slickrick
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: Cringing Negativism Network

see also: Barack Obama: The Communist Years.

This one hasn’t been completed yet.


22 posted on 08/17/2011 7:42:51 AM PDT by OrangeHoof (Obama: The Dr. Kevorkian of the American economy.)
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To: nixonsnose

i lived in austin for a bit more than a year.

many republicans perry’s age or older were democrats.

they flipped during comrades hillary and bill’s regime.


23 posted on 08/17/2011 7:43:27 AM PDT by ken21 (ruling class dem + rino progressives -- destroying america for 150 years.)
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To: CA Conservative
Algore has always been a flaming liberal, he only gave lip service to a little conservative leaning to keep his senate seat.

http://escapetyranny.com/2011/08/15/why-rick-perry-supported-al-gore-for-prez-in-1988-huh/

24 posted on 08/17/2011 7:49:23 AM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: org.whodat

http://escapetyranny.com/2011/08/15/why-rick-perry-supported-al-gore-for-prez-in-1988-huh/


25 posted on 08/17/2011 7:49:59 AM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: Marty62

Reagan voted for FDR all 4 times.


26 posted on 08/17/2011 7:51:48 AM PDT by Huck (Read Antifederalist Brutus)
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To: Huck

Yes and he was anti nuclear power. So what in the hell does Reagan positions have to do with 2011.


27 posted on 08/17/2011 7:56:00 AM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: nixonsnose

sure seems like this is just one more of orchestrated anti-Perry threads, from either the RP camp, or DU...

this man Perry scares the living daylights out of these folks, because they know that he will kick the heck out of this President, when it comes to the general.


28 posted on 08/17/2011 7:57:40 AM PDT by Chuzzlewit
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To: nixonsnose

He’s about as Republican as you can get?!

Are you using Juan McCain to set the bar?


29 posted on 08/17/2011 7:59:53 AM PDT by Tempest (Ruining the day of corporate butt kissers everywhere.)
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To: nixonsnose
Gov. Rick Perry, a no-apologies conservative known for slashing government spending and opposing all tax increases, is about as Republican as you can get.

Bwahahah. Actually, Perry fits right in with the big government loving, deficit spending, pro-Amnesty, Globalist Republican Party that nominates Juan McLame for President and has the likes of Crybaby Boehner and Mitch McConnell as "leaders".

30 posted on 08/17/2011 8:02:23 AM PDT by Roninf5-1
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To: org.whodat

It has to do with being rational and measuring things against reality rather than fantasy.


31 posted on 08/17/2011 8:05:21 AM PDT by Huck (Read Antifederalist Brutus)
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To: Tempest
Had to be using Juan are gramnesty one, all three are open border pushers.
32 posted on 08/17/2011 8:06:06 AM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: veritas2002

I used to be a liberal, too. The converts really understand what they have chosen and what they have left behind. This is the first thing I have read about Perry that makes me like him a bit more.


33 posted on 08/17/2011 8:06:49 AM PDT by bboop (Stealth Tutor)
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To: nixonsnose
The swing state that had voted for Democrats in four of the previous five presidential elections turned into a deep red one that has chosen Republicans for president eight straight times and does not have a single Democratic statewide elected official.

"Ronald Reagan gets a heck of a lot of credit for that," says James A. Baker III, who ran the rival presidential campaigns of Ford in 1976 and George H.W. Bush in 1980 and later served as Reagan's White House chief of staff and Treasury secretary. "The whole shape and nature of the state changed."

Read more at The Texas Reagan Revolution

Anyone who thinks Texas is still a swing state is not well informed.

34 posted on 08/17/2011 8:07:42 AM PDT by Arrowhead1952 (Dear God, please let it rain in Texas. Amen.)
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To: org.whodat

Let’s also not forget that Gore wanted to run against Mr. country-club RINO was-for-abortion-rights-before-he-was-against-them George “voodoo economics” Bush.


35 posted on 08/17/2011 8:10:52 AM PDT by Lou Budvis ("Socialism...the smiling face of slavery")
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To: ken21
they flipped during comrades hillary and bill’s regime.

Most people in Texas were democrats back in the 70s and 80s. I learned when the peanut farmer [yes, I voted for him because I grew up on a farm] was the POTUS, and what he did to the military. It wasn't good for us.

36 posted on 08/17/2011 8:15:47 AM PDT by Arrowhead1952 (Dear God, please let it rain in Texas. Amen.)
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To: Huck

Fantasy is using that 8 ball thing to determine what Reagan would think are do, but he was for individuality. Which means measuring each person on their own merits. Reagan is no mans yard stick and he would have objected to that based on individuality.


37 posted on 08/17/2011 8:19:33 AM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: FreeReign

Ooh! Snappy comeback. /rolleyes

Got any FACTS, or just more ignorant parroted lies?


38 posted on 08/17/2011 8:19:45 AM PDT by Sudetenland (There can be no freedom without God--What man gives, man can take away.)
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To: Lady Lucky

Same with me. Right now I’m 50/50 Perry/Bachman leaning Perry only because I think he’s got a better chance. If SP jumped in, I’d support her. If Ryan jumped in, I’d support him over the other 3. He’s the one candidate who will for sure put the clown suit on 0bama during the debates.


39 posted on 08/17/2011 8:23:11 AM PDT by Lou Budvis ("Socialism...the smiling face of slavery")
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To: FreeReign

thank you for taking the time, to actually look up the actual facts in #19.
Sadly, many people here, seem to think name-calling is just as good...


40 posted on 08/17/2011 8:29:43 AM PDT by Elendur (It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it goes. - Thomas Jefferson)
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