Rick Perry, byname of James Richard Perry (born March 4, 1950, Haskell, Texas, U.S.), American politician who was the longest-serving governor of Texas (2000– ). He sought the Republican nomination for president in 2012.
Perry was the second of two children born to a west Texas cotton farmer and his wife, a bookkeeper at a local cotton gin. Perry attended Texas A&M University and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in animal science in 1972. He subsequently enlisted in the U.S. Air Force and flew transport planes both domestically and abroad; by the time of his discharge in 1977, he had attained the rank of captain. He then returned to the family farm, where he assisted his father with cattle ranching and cotton- and grain-growing operations.
A Southern Democrat—like his father, who served as a county commissioner—Perry successfully ran for the Texas House of Representatives in 1984 and was reelected in 1986 and in 1988. During his tenure in the statehouse, he served on the House Appropriations Committee, where he affiliated himself with a group of fiscally conservative Democrats; he did, however, vote for a tax increase of some $5 billion in 1987. Perry served as the Texas cochair of Al Gore’s failed bid for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination before defecting to the Republican Party in 1989.
In 1990 Perry successfully challenged the Democratic incumbent Jim Hightower in the race to head the Texas Department of Agriculture; Perry was easily reelected in 1994. In 1998 he stood for lieutenant governor of Texas and—with an endorsement from former U.S. president George H.W. Bush—prevailed with just over 50 percent of the vote. Perry acceded to the governorship in 2000 following the election of Bush’s son, then-governor George W. Bush, to the presidency of the United States. He won the governorship in his own right in 2002 and went on to win successive terms in 2006 and 2010 to become the state’s longest-serving governor.
During his tenure as governor, Perry continued to espouse a brand of fiscal conservatism that had defined his legislative career. He oversaw the enactment of a malpractice settlement cap (2003) and cuts to property taxes paid to school districts (2006). However, despite opposing the economic stimulus package put forth by the administration of Pres. Barack Obama in 2009, he accepted most of the federal funds allocated to Texas, barring $555 million for unemployment compensation. Efforts by the legislature to accept the additional money were unsuccessful.
Perry advocated a rangereligious beliefs in opposing abortion and same-sex marriage. In 2007 he drew the ire of constituents from across the political spectrum by issuing an executive order mandating the inoculation of sixth-grade girls with Gardasil, a vaccine that works against the human papillomavirus (HPV). Though the order allowed parents to opt out on behalf of their children, it was overturned by the legislature amid speculation about Perry’s close ties to a lobbyist for the vaccine’s manufacturer, Merck & Company. He also expressed skepticism regarding the scientific basis for climate change. Perry’s positions provided further appeal to members of the Tea Party movement who were already attracted to his antitax platform.
of socially conservative positions. Raised a Methodist and later a member of an evangelical Southern Baptist megachurch, he cited hisPerry outlined his political platform in Fed Up!: Our Fight to Save America from Washington (2010). He officially declared his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in August 2011.