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Bob Perry Needs a
Hug |
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The biggest campaign contributor in the country
is a reclusive Houston homebuilder who doesn’t
cooperate with the press (until now), never
poses for photographs (until now), and keeps
his personal life top secret (until now). Maybe
it’s because so many people blame him for
dragging American politics into the
gutter.
by S. C. Gwynne, Texas Monthly (April
2007)
|
Highlights and [bracketed
comments] added
LIKE MANY
ELECTION CAMPAIGNS LAST FALL, the race in Colorado’s Seventh
Congressional District between Democrat Ed
Perlmutter and Republican Rick
O’Donnell was a bruising affair. Personal attacks and
negative advertising were the order of the day. According to
Perlmutter, O’Donnell was a right-winger with dangerous ideas
who wanted to privatize Social Security, while pro-O’Donnell
ads attacked Perlmutter for being soft on immigration. One such
thirty-second spot was especially pointed, claiming that, as
state senator, “Ed Perlmutter sponsored legislation giving
taxpayer money to illegal immigrants.”
On its
face, this ad seemed typical, one of thousands run last fall in
an unusually hostile political season. Closer inspection,
however, revealed that the ad was, on just about every level
one can imagine, not what it seemed. For one thing, it wasn’t
true. The legislation that Perlmutter sponsored did concern
taxpayer-funded benefits, but they were for legal immigrants,
not illegal ones. The casual viewer might also have assumed
that the advertisement had been produced by or in cooperation
with O’Donnell’s campaign. But his staff had nothing to do with
its content, nor was it produced or financed within a thousand
miles of Colorado. The ad’s genesis, in fact, was a sort of
miracle of remote control. Reporters who
dug into the story found that funding for the ad had come from
a 527 group called Americans for Honesty on Issues
(AFHOI). The past several election cycles have
seen a large number of these so-called 527’s, which are named
after the section of the federal tax code that exempts certain
political groups from paying taxes.
Normal campaign finance limits in raising and spending money do
not apply to 527’s, a loophole through which millions of
dollars have flowed. Due in part to this lack of oversight,
527’s have developed a reputation for being shadowy, and AFHOI
was no exception. In 2006 the group produced adversarial
television ads in nine congressional races across seven states,
but when the press started probing, it seemed to vanish into
thin air. Its address was a post office box in a UPS store in
Alexandria, Virginia; its “contact” was a conservative
political consultant in Houston named Sue Walden who didn’t
return calls. Reporters studying the story
were unable to determine exactly who had come up with the idea
for the ads, who had produced them, or how the
Perlmutter-O’Donnell race had been targeted in the first
place.
The one
thing they did find out was the identity of the man who had
pumped $3 million into AFHOI and was its sole benefactor:
a wealthy Houston homebuilder named
Bob Perry. Perry is the nation’s largest
individual political donor. In 2004 and 2006 he gave a
total of $29 million to state and federal races. Last year,
more than $9 million of that was channeled through three 527’s
that aggressively targeted races for the U.S. Senate and House
of Representatives. In spite of such a
massive political presence, Perry is as mysterious as some of
the groups he funds. He never talks to the press, rarely
appears in public, and remains an inscrutable figure even to
people to whom he has given hundreds of thousands of dollars.
He might have maintained this relatively low profile
indefinitely, except that in 2004 he was the largest funder of
the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, the controversial 527 that
many people credit with derailing John Kerry’s presidential
campaign. Almost overnight, Perry became a poster boy
for the notion that a cabal of wealthy donors, shady
consultants, and unaccountable 527’s was taking over American
politics.
[HOT: According to Texans for
Public Justice in
this NPR broadcast, Perry has donated over
$21,000,000 to political candidates and judges since 2006 -
including Governor Rick Perry, all but six
members of the Texas legislature, and all nine Republican
justices who make up the Texas Supreme
Court.]
Perry
first appeared as a real force in Texas politics in 2002, when
he dropped $3.8 million into campaigns, most of it aimed at
taking over the state legislature and ultimately recarving
Texas into Republican-friendly congressional districts—a gambit
coordinated by then-House majority leader Tom
DeLay and also heavily funded by San Antonio doctor
James Leininger and other wealthy Republican donors. He later
became the largest single contributor to
Governor Rick Perry’s reelection
campaign. But in spite of such lavish giving, he is the
odd political donor who seems to want none of the conventional
perks in exchange for his money. He never attends fundraisers,
never calls up candidates to solicit votes, never threatens or
cajoles. He has not asked the governor for the usual
appointments to state boards that accompany this sort of
giving. Nor does he, unlike many other political patrons,
demand that certain consultants be used exclusively as conduits
or as media contractors.
[HOT: We see it
differently since Perry used his power to setup the
Texas Residential Construction Commission. The TRCC is an
agency that's widely criticized for protecting builders
from lawsuits rather than protecting homeowners from bad
builders. When John Krugh, SVP &
Corporate Counsel for Bob Perry Homes, drafted the bill
that established the agency, not one single consumer
advocate was consulted. Mr. Krugh was later appointed, by
Governor Perry, as the first
commissioner.
We find it especially interesting
that Perry came to Austin to personally meet with
lawmakers just one day after the
two damning NPR reports and one day before
hearing that threatened to abolish "his
agency."]
The money
comes, say politicians who get it, without strings. “He has
been a major contributor of mine,” says Texas land commissioner
Jerry Patterson. “Over the years he has
probably donated more than two hundred thousand dollars to my
campaigns, and he has never called me. When I was in the
Senate, he never called me to vote one way or another or to
say, ‘Hey, I would really like you to take a look at this,’ or
‘I am really opposed to that.’ ”
Unseen by
the public, uninvolved with his candidates, the most powerful
political donor in the nation has until now remained largely an
enigma. Few apart from a small circle of close friends in
Houston know much about him. What they do know may surprise
some people. For instance, Perry favors
affirmative action. He has given money to Democrats,
particularly black and Latino Democrats. He opposes his party’s
hard line on immigration rights. He is a large-scale donor to
an inner-city Houston foundation sponsored by a liberal black
minister and to an educational scholarship program for Hispanic
students founded by a liberal professor. So who is Bob
Perry? Is he the monolithic, unyielding, far-right
ideologue he is often portrayed to be? A philanthropist who
gives generously to causes he believes in? Some hybrid of the
two? Almost nobody knows, and that’s the way he likes
it.
THE
DOSSIER ON BOB PERRY is amazingly thin for such a prominent
force in American politics. Here are the basics: He is 74 years
old, of modest stature but trim, physically fit, and powerfully
built, the product of frequent exercise. He played halfback on
his high school football team and was known for being “small
but fast,” in the words of a classmate. He is handsome, a
successful genetic splice of good-looking parents. He is
formal, restrained, and wears dark, conservative suits when he
is working. Almost everyone addresses him as “Mr.
Perry.”
He lives in a stately, 13,874-square-foot, eight-bedroom,
dun-colored stucco house with four big pillars in the town of
Nassau Bay, southeast of Houston, on a narrow bayou called
Clear Creek a few miles from NASA at Clear Lake. He has
lived there for thirty years. Aside from a small crop of large
homes, the neighborhood is pretty solidly middle class. Nothing
fancy. The house is appraised by Harris County at $662,010,
though most of the houses around it are in the $200,000 range.
He is an ardent pro-lifer and a member of
the Nassau Bay Baptist Church. He is not a teetotaler—he
drinks a glass of wine socially now and again. He is a proud
alumnus of his alma mater, Baylor University. His wife,
Doylene, is a former fourth-grade teacher who, after their four
children left home, went back and got a master’s degree and
then taught at a community college. He exercises daily and is
an avid reader of Latin American literature. He likes to tell
jokes but tells them badly and then apologizes when they don’t
work.
I know
all this from looking at photographs of Perry and talking to
his friends and acquaintances. I have
never actually met with him. To the best of my knowledge, no
one in my profession has. Perry’s policy of not talking
directly to the press hasn’t changed, but for this story, he
did allow me some rudimentary access. I was allowed to ask
questions through an intermediary. I was permitted to tour his
business, taken to see the exterior of his home, invited to
visit certain of his charities, and cleared to speak with
several of his friends and close associates. He also allowed
texas monthly to photograph him, though I was not there for the
session.
Almost
everyone I interviewed told me how important Perry’s work is to
him. At an age when many people with his wealth would be
pitching 9-irons across expensively manicured golf courses,
Perry still goes in every day to the drab, undistinguished,
three-story building on the Interstate 45 frontage road about a
mile and a half from Hobby Airport, where Perry Homes is
headquartered. The office practically screams “anonymity.”
Inside, there are marble floors and cream-colored walls and a
few paintings but little other adornment. The company has been
in this location since the early seventies.
During my
tour of the building, I was allowed to step inside Perry’s
office. He was not present. Predictably, the modestly appointed
room offered up little in the way of clues. It contained a
desk, a high-backed leather chair, a few aerial maps, and an
enormous globe. His view takes in a parking lot, the Lucky
Dragon Buffet, a Super 8 Motel, and the elevated concrete
columns of I-45. I tried to imagine him on the phone in this
office, speaking with the organizers of the Economic
Freedom Fund Committee. What does he say? “I’ll put
that five-million-dollar check in the mail next week”? Along
one wall of the office there was a set of shelves where I
expected to find pictures of his family, but the only photo was
of Ronald Reagan.
This
dreary, paved-over corner of Houston is where all the money
comes from. Like everything else about Perry, his company is
private, and therefore information on it is scarce. But one can
do some primitive triangulation. He
founded Perry Homes in 1967 and has slowly built it into the
nation’s thirty-fifth-largest homebuilder. In 2005 the company
put up 2,688 homes, all in Texas. The houses are mostly
traditional, four-square brick affairs, ranging in price from
roughly $150,000 to $500,000. These days the company builds
both master-planned homes in the suburbs and townhouses in the
city. According to Builder
magazine’s list of the top one hundred homebuilders in America,
Perry Homes has revenues of $593 million.
Since profit margins in the industry generally run between 10
and 20 percent, the company likely earns between $59 million
and $118 million in net profit every year. This would be the
money that Perry, who owns 100 percent of Perry Homes, can use
as he pleases. If he chose to sell his company today, it would
be worth anywhere between $385 million and $652 million, based
on a recent study by the Swiss bank UBS of current valuations
in the homebuilding industry. None of Perry’s children are
active in the business, but friends say that Perry has been
financially generous with them. Still, it seems that, even with
$16 million spent on politics in 2006 and uncounted other
millions on charity, there is plenty to go around. If he wanted
to, he could dump $50 million a year into American politics
without breaking a sweat.
Perry did
not come from wealth. Not by a long shot. He was born
Bobby Jack Perry in a small farmhouse in rural
Bosque County in 1932, in a stretch of land northwest of Waco
known as the Blackstump Valley. His father, W. C.
Perry, was the principal of a small elementary school.
In the summers, W. C. picked cotton, labored on construction
crews, and pumped gas as he worked his way toward a graduate
degree in education from Baylor University. He
took a job as principal of Meridian High School in 1943, when
his son Bobby was eleven. (W. C. Perry ultimately became dean
of men and vice president of student affairs at Baylor, where
he had the distinction, in 1967, of expelling his son’s
eventual beneficiary, Tom DeLay, for various
infractions, including drinking and painting parts of the Texas
A&M campus Baylor green.)
Meridian
was, by all accounts, a pleasant place to grow up. “Meridian
was a farm center, and people did not have a lot of money,”
recalls Donna Anderson, a childhood friend of Perry’s, “but it
was a friendly town. It was also a very small place. A trip to
Waco was a big deal. A trip to Dallas was shooting the moon.
Nowadays, Bob and I are world travelers, but the world was a
very different place back then.” Though the Perry family was
far from wealthy, they owned a trim, modest, stucco house, were
the first in town to own a television, and could afford to buy
a new car every three years, which they went to Detroit to pick
up.
Anderson
remembers Perry as a polite kid who was a budding capitalist.
“He used to have rabbits,” she says. “My father, who thought
the world of him, used to let him have lumber to build rabbit
hutches.” Perry raised the rabbits, slaughtered them with a
lead pipe, hung them up, skinned them, gutted them, and then
sold them. He
bought goats and sheep to sell at auctions, hawked melons on
the street, and raised and sold banty hens. He also worked at
the local hospital and the local food market. He played
football and ran track, and friends say he was popular and well
liked.
After
graduating from high school (his class contained 22 people),
Perry attended Baylor, where he majored in history. After
graduating, Perry started working as a high school history
teacher. He went on to teach and coach football and other
sports for the next ten years in San Angelo
and the Waco area. During the summers, he toiled on
construction crews, and in 1965 he ended up in Houston working
for established homebuilders. Two years later he moved to
Houston and started Perry Homes.
“Perry told me that he built the business more conservatively
than most people build a business,” says spokesman Holm.
“He kept his risks very low and kept his
equity-to-debt ratio very safe. Perry Homes has always
grown in a measured fashion.” It was this fundamental
conservatism that allowed Perry to survive the real estate,
banking, and homebuilding cataclysm that took place in Texas in
the eighties. Companies with any significant debt were wiped
out. According to Raymond Palacios, who worked
for Perry Homes from 1986 to 1996 and now owns a successful car
dealership in El Paso, “Mr. Perry went through very hard times
because the mid-eighties were very tough for the housing
market. The business really took off with the building of
master-planned communities. There was double-digit growth.” The
company’s success was spurred in part by the fact that many
homebuilders were, by that time, bankrupt, casualties of the
real estate bust. Perry’s master-planned communities are now a
common sight, especially around Texas’s major
cities.
Perhaps
because he has made his money off those who can afford to buy
their own homes, a significant portion of Perry’s charitable
giving has targeted those who cannot. Ten miles across the
border from Brownsville, through the teeming, cluttered streets
of the booming Mexican city of Matamoros, is a
private orphanage called the
Matamoros Children’s Home. Also
known as Casa Hogar, the home houses 186 orphaned,
abused, abandoned, or neglected children from ages four
through eighteen. It is run by a doctor named
Saul Camacho and his wife, Maria. Its
principal benefactor is Bob Perry.
Casa Hogar is not the only orphanage Perry supports outside the
United States. There are many more in Mexico, in Reynosa
and elsewhere, that I was not invited to tour, or even informed
of. He supports another in El Salvador that he does
acknowledge. On a tour of Casa Hogar’s brand-new, Perry-donated
dining hall in January, I saw a Christmas tree covered with
cards the children had made thanking Mr. Perry, as he is known,
for his kindness. Perry may be alternately admired, feared, or
loathed in Texas political circles, but here, he is loved. He
is a frequent visitor, and the kids all know him.
According
to Perry’s friends, the lesson I should draw from my tour of
the orphanage is this: While it is typical of his philanthropic
work, it is also just a small sample of the activities in which
he has long been involved. “He has dozens
and dozens of these things going at a time,” says
Michael Stevens, a Houston developer who
chairs the Governor’s Business Council and is one of Perry’s
closest friends. “I have never called him to do something for
people that he has not done. His
charitable giving is far larger than what you have seen in the
political arena.” He does not even tell his friends the
full scope of what he does, according to Weekley. “I consider
Bob a good friend, and I had no knowledge of the orphanages,”
he says.
By all accounts, Perry is extraordinarily, and spontaneously,
generous in his giving. It is driven by what Holm terms
“the multiplier effect, the idea that he can go and help
someone who is a net drain on society and turn him into a net
plus. It is a version of ‘Give a man a fish and you feed him
for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a
lifetime.’ ” Though Stevens, like Perry, does not like to
acknowledge his charitable gifts, he offers two examples of
projects he and Perry have developed together. One aims to
give jobs to soldiers who have lost limbs
in the war in Iraq. Stevens says the two men have sunk
“hundreds of thousands of dollars” into the project. “We plan
to roll it out in six months,” he says. “The plan is to get
corporations throughout the U.S. to employ injured veterans.”
The other project is typical of what friends say is the more
personal side of Perry’s giving. When former U. S. attorney
Michael Shelby, a man Perry and Stevens
admired greatly, died after a long struggle with cancer, the
two men made sizable donations to a college scholarship fund
for his children. “This kind of thing happens all of the time,”
says Stevens. Indeed, one of Perry’s classmates from Meridian
High School says that this sort of private, personal charity
extends to his old hometown. “Over the
years, any of the people we went to high school with who had
money problems, he helped them,” says Hiram
Woosley, who played in the backfield with Perry for
the Meridian High Yellow Jackets.
The list goes on: $100,000 to the United Negro College Fund, $1
million for a YMCA in League City, more than $1 million to fund
scholarships for the Center for Mexican American Studies at the
University of Houston. “A lot of people are surprised to
learn that we are friends,” says Tatcho
Mindiola, the sociology professor who directs the
center. “He knows that I am a liberal Democrat, and we have
candid discussions and discuss our views. I discovered that he
is a strong supporter of affirmative action, and that would
surprise a lot of people in the Republican party. He knows that
discrimination is real, and he thinks there should be special
outreach to get Hispanics involved in education. He is not a
rabid right-winger. Simply not.”
THOUGH HE
NOW GIVES MASSIVELY to national campaigns, it was in his home
state of Texas that the intensely private Perry first entered
the brawling, public, intemperate world of politics.
He was not always a Republican. Prior to
1978, he was a Democrat and gave money primarily to
Democrats. That year he supported incumbent
Dolph Briscoe in the Democratic primary for
governor. Briscoe, a conservative Democrat, lost to the liberal
John Hill. Republican candidate Bill
Clements then called on Perry, who was already wealthy
enough to appear on politicians’ radar screens. Clements laid
out his pro-business, pro-jobs agenda and asked for Perry’s
support. The result was that Perry ended
up heading Democrats for Clements and co-chairing his winning
campaign. Three years later fellow Houstonian
James Baker, who was then White House chief of
staff under Reagan and who knew Perry from the local political
circuit, said to Perry, in effect, “You believe everything that
we believe, or even more so. You should switch sides.” Baker
converted him, and Perry was soon swept up in the Reagan
revolution as a newly minted conservative Republican. (It is an
interesting coincidence that 1978 was also the year
Karl Rove went to work for Clements, launching
a career that, like Perry’s, has been instrumental in transforming Texas from a Democratic
to a Republican stronghold.)
Throughout
the eighties and nineties, the political
cause Perry was most passionate about was tort
reform, the campaign to rein in huge,
multimillion-dollar jury verdicts in favor of plaintiffs. Over
the past 25 years, he could usually be counted on to
support any candidate for the House or
Senate who was opposed by either a trial lawyer or by someone
funded by a trial lawyer. He has
given millions to Texans for Lawsuit Reform. “He is a
patriot, and as a patriot he believes that there are major
public policy issues that are very important for the country,
like tort reform,” says Weekley. “Without
it, he thinks our civil justice system is not on solid ground.
If people lose faith in the ability to get a fair trial, then
it is a threat to our civil society, and he literally
sees it that way.”
Perry’s money was hugely influential; when it moved, especially
in a Republican primary, it was often the kiss of death for
anyone opposing Perry’s candidate. It meant that, if you
were going to run as a Republican and not put tort reform at
the top of your agenda, you had better have independent wealth.
Like James Leininger’s support for candidates
who favored school vouchers, Perry’s money became a de facto
enforcement mechanism for Republican candidates in the
primaries. And, of course, inflows of such money meant that any
Democrat who smelled remotely of “trial lawyer”
invariably—through the efforts of Perry, Texans for Lawsuit
Reform, and others—found himself in a race with a well-funded
opponent.
One such
case is particularly illustrative. In 2002 Perry gave $31,000
to Dionne Roberts, who opposed incumbent
Democrat Scott Hochberg for the Texas House of
Representatives. Shortly after this, Perry appeared at a United
Negro College Fund gala dinner in honor of the late
John Coleman, a prominent Houston physician
and civic leader and the former chairman of the fund’s Houston
chapter. Also present at the dinner was Coleman’s son,
Democratic state representative Garnet
Coleman, who had been bothered by Perry’s support of
Roberts. “I went up to him and said, ‘I don’t understand why
you spend your time and money going after someone like
Scott Hochberg,’ ” Coleman told me. “ ‘He’s
just trying to help schoolchildren get an education.’ ”
According to Coleman, Perry responded by saying, “Well, he is
supported by those trial lawyers.” To Coleman, this confirmed
that Perry’s donations were made for purely ideological
reasons. The problem, as he saw it, was that “Perry’s only reason for going after Scott was that
Scott had gotten a check from the trial lawyers. He didn’t look
to see whether Scott had value in the Legislature, and he
didn’t look to see some of the things Scott had done that he
might have agreed with … It is things like this that
contribute to the clear partisan and ideological divide in the
Legislature.”
Perry’s
financial clout sometimes works in the Democrats’ favor. In
2004 Democratic representative Patrick Rose
was thought to be facing a tough challenge from a Republican
opponent. But when Perry signaled his support for the pro-tort
reform Rose with gifts totaling $15,000, it virtually
guaranteed Rose’s victory. Minority Democrats in particular
have been the recipients of some of Perry’s largesse, a fact
his critics often fail to mention. While his biggest
contributions to individuals in 2006 went to Republican losers
Joe Nixon ($262,500), Jim
Landtroop ($100,000), and Michael
Schofield ($100,000), he also dropped substantial
amounts on minority candidates, including Democratic
representatives Sylvester Turner ($50,000),
Eddie Lucio III ($25,000), Ana
Hernandez ($22,500), Norma Chavez
($20,000), and Senators Rodney Ellis ($17,500)
and Mario Gallegos ($21,000).
It should
be noted, though, that most of the minority Democrats in the
statehouse who have received Perry’s money are
supporters of Republican Speaker
Tom Craddick. Perry, in fact, has
repeatedly proved his willingness to use his money
against Republicans who are deemed insufficiently
supportive of the Speaker. You could see this sort of
thing happening in 2006, when six incumbent Republican
representatives were targeted for opposing Craddick or
for being RINOs— Republican in name only. Perry gave
$62,500 to Republican challenger Chris
Hatley in his losing primary race against
incumbent Charlie Geren; he gave $40,000
to Lorraine O’Donnell in her losing race
against Pat Haggerty; and he gave
$10,000 to Nathan Macias in his bitterly
fought primary victory over incumbent Carter
Casteel.
Much of
this has had to do with pursuing his primary issue of tort
reform, and as almost anyone in Texas
will tell you, Perry and fellow travelers like Weekley have
succeeded in curtailing litigation. Moderate reforms
over the years culminated in major legislation in 2003 that
severely limited the jury awards plaintiffs could win. Perry’s
enormous giving during the elections of 2002, leading to the
Republican sweep of the statehouse, in effect made that
happen.
But Perry
is by no means a single-issue donor. Land commissioner
Patterson notes that back in 1984, when he was running for
Congress, “Perry asked me, ‘What is your position on life?’ It
kind of confused me at first. Then I realized he was talking
about abortion. So I told him what I thought.” Some of Perry’s
large-gift recipients in 2006 included the Republican
Party of Texas ($780,000), Texans for Lawsuit
Reform ($601,000), the Harris County
Republican Party ($125,000), and Texans for
Marriage ($100,000). They summarize his fundamental
conservative Republican leanings: He is
pro-tort reform, anti—gay marriage, and
anti-abortion.
Perry
wields some of his power in Texas through his relationship with
the Austin lobbying firm Hillco Partners, one
of his closest and most important affiliations and a firm
closely aligned with Craddick. For roughly the past ten years,
Perry’s lobbyist has been Neal “Buddy” Jones.
Jones’s partner Bill Miller was until recently
Perry’s spokesman and has now assumed the less visible role of
adviser. Jones consults regularly with Perry both in his
lobbying efforts for Perry Homes and as an adviser to Perry on
legislative issues and on various candidates and races in
Texas. Though no one knows exactly what Jones tells Perry, the
implicit power in that advice is huge, having the potential to
channel Perry’s resources into specific races. This of course
means that Jones—already one of the most powerful lobbyists in
Texas—has just that much more clout. Perry also gave $545,000
last year to Hillco’s political action committee, which amounts
to Miller and Jones’s private piggy bank to dole out to
legislators and candidates as they see fit. And though Hillco
has full discretion on how the money is spent, it acts as a de
facto conduit for Perry’s personal money.
Perhaps
nowhere was Perry’s Texas clout more apparent than in the
2003 creation of the Texas Residential Construction
Commission (TRCC). An offshoot of the tort
reform movement, the TRCC was ostensibly
intended to make it easier to resolve disputes between builders
and homebuyers and to amend the old system that was notoriously
builder friendly. The result, says a chorus of critics, was
just the opposite. In practice the TRCC became a captive agency
to the industry it was supposed to regulate, and the law forced
consumers to go through a lengthy complaint process only to
find that at the end, the TRCC had no power to compel builders
to do anything. This outcome was, of course, entirely
favorable to the homebuilding industry, and in fact, it turned
out that the person who’d written most of the bill that had
created the commission was Perry Homes’ corporate counsel
John Krugh, who was later appointed by
Governor Perry to the newly created
TRCC.
As soon
became known, Governor Perry had received
a $100,000 contribution from Bob Perry roughly a month before
signing the law and appointing Krugh. Bob Perry also
spread money around to the two legislative committees that had
worked on the legislation. Texas homebuilders in general had
given $8.9 million to candidates for state office between 2001
and 2003. The inherent conflicts of
interest touched off a large and ongoing controversy. In
January 2006, Comptroller Carole Keeton
Strayhorn issued a blistering report, saying,
“After reviewing TRCC and its enabling
statute, it is clear that the agency functions as a
builder-protection agency … For these reasons, if it were up to
me personally, I would blast this TRCC builder-protection
agency off the bureaucratic books.” Many people came to
believe that, in effect, Bob Perry had been given his own state
agency. Says Janet Ahmad, of Homeowners for
Better Building, a watchdog group and consistent Perry critic:
“Perry was the kingpin and the brains behind the TRCC. He was
always behind the scenes.”
AND THAT
IS WHERE HE IS content to stay. Because he refuses to speak to
reporters, it has never been possible to know what Perry
himself actually thinks about his position as one of the most
powerful and controversial private citizens in American
politics. For the purposes of this
article, however, he agreed to answer some questions through
his spokesman, Holm. The arrangement was informal: I would give
questions to Holm; Holm would relay them to Perry and take
notes on the replies; then Holm would convey the answers back
to me.
What does
Perry think about the savaging he receives in the media? “He
doesn’t dwell on it,” Holm said. “And he tends not to say
negative things about people, though he thinks the media
portrayals are not an accurate reflection of him. There is a
real and negative impact on his family, however, who think
these stories and portrayals are gross mischaracterizations of
the man that he is—a benefactor of society and a caretaker of
the underserved.”
I asked
Holm to ask Perry to list the five issues
that he cared the most about. Holm gave them in order of
priority, as follows:
1)
Jobs. “He’s
very free market,” Holm explained. “He believes that job
creations are the way to empower families.”
[HOT:
If he's so
concerned about families, why does he
promote policies that protect builders to such
an extend that
serious construction defects take families into financial ruin?]
2)
Education.
“As you can see from his donations, he feels that education
really is the great equalizer.”
3)
Immigration.
“Mr. Perry says we have to have immigration policies that
give people hope. What is this nation other than a nation
of hope? And we have hope because we have lots of jobs and
educational opportunities.”
4)
Security.
“Perry is a big supporter of domestic security, from cops
on the street through the war on terrorism.”
5)
Tax reform.
“He believes in tax relief, empowering the middle class and
giving back to families.”
My first
response to this list was surprise that tort reform was not on
it. “That’s deliberate,” Holm said. “A few years ago it
absolutely would have been.” My second response was that the
agenda could easily be that of a Democrat. “Exactly,” Holm
replied. “And of course, as you know, he funds lots of
Democrats.”
I also
wanted to know how Perry reconciled his obvious desire for
privacy with his desire for political action. For the first
time in our exchange, Holm put Perry’s response in the first
person: “I don’t know that I desire
absolute anonymity. I’m rather private and don’t have a need to
go out there, but I am willing to make important sacrifices.
Obviously I am because I give up substantial amounts of money,
and I am also giving up my privacy. I do it because I think it
is in the best interests of the cause, be it political or
charitable. I just view it as a sacrifice.”
Whoever
Bob Perry really is, such selflessness will no doubt be
chilling news for his foes.
The Money Guy
Executive editor S. C. Gwynne on writing about political donor
Bob Perry.
Interview
by Emmet Sullivan
texasmonthly.com: What led you to write about
Bob Perry?
S. C. Gwynne: As the largest individual
political contributor in America, he is a highly visible and
extremely powerful person. He is also extremely private, and
relatively little is known about him. This seemed like exactly
the sort of story I like to do. There was lots of room for
original reporting on a subject that ought to be of interest to
anyone who likes politics.
texasmonthly.com: It must have been a challenge
to write an extended profile without any direct contact with
Perry. How did you go about starting the piece (as in, when you
knew you weren’t going to get an interview, what was your next
step)?
SG: It was something of a challenge, though
Perry did offer some cooperation, something he had not done
before with other reporters. I was allowed access to some of
his friends and associates, and allowed to see and tour his
business. He also ultimately agreed to answer some questions
through an intermediary. So in that sense, I wasn’t flying
completely blind. I also interviewed lots of other people in
business and politics in the state and elsewhere.
texasmonthly.com: You have a surprising amount
of information about a man who doesn’t like the spotlight. How
long have you been looking into Perry? Where did you go for
information?
SG: Almost all
information comes from interviews. The printed record contains
a great deal about the political effects of his money, but not
much about who he is or how he operates.
texasmonthly.com: What
surprised you most about Perry?
SG: His style of giving
in both politics and charity. He is quite spontaneously
generous. He gives lots of money. He basically just decides
that he likes you and then writes a big check. He does this in
all sorts of ways. We are accustomed to expect a great deal of
accountability for money we give. He gives because he believes
in something, and he doesn’t worry so much about what happens
next.
texasmonthly.com: Why do you think he let you
in so much closer than other reporters?
SG: I am not sure. I think he was looking for
someone to write something that went a bit deeper than the sort
of stuff usually written about him, which mostly appears in
daily newspapers on the occasion of some news story about a
group like the Swift boat veterans. I think he may have seen
that it was in his interest to let someone have a more detailed
look at who he is and what he does. But that’s just
speculation. I don’t really know.
texasmonthly.com: Are figures like Perry the
future of fundraising in American politics? Mostly unknown
people donating millions based on single reasons like tort
reform?
SG: There are various movements afoot to try to
restrict the power of these megagivers like George Soros and
Bob Perry. I would guess that at some
point some federal restrictions would be placed on the giving
to 527s, though at some point this is a free-speech issue, too.
In Texas I don’t see much change in the near future that would
inhibit Perry’s ability to give large sums to Texas causes and
candidates.
texasmonthly.com: If you had had the chance to
talk to Perry directly, and not through spokesman Anthony Holm,
what is the one thing you would have wanted to talk with him
about the most?
SG: More than anything else, I would be
interested in knowing how he decides to spend his money.
Specifically how. He gave $16 million to politics last year and
untold millions more to charity and philanthropy, and some of
this has a huge effect. It is just not clear to me, in his day
to day life, how he makes these decisions. So I would ask him
about that.
texasmonthly.com: Was this the most challenging
profile you’ve done, or can you remember a harder story to
write?
SG: I once did a profile of the man who at the
time was considered by most of the major intelligence agencies
in the West to be the main dealer of nuclear weapons components
in the Soviet Union, just as the old empire was breaking up in
the early nineties. I had to report the story in New York,
London, Moscow, and Vienna, and I was trailed constantly by
intelligence agents. It was a very difficult profile to write
because it was hard to get at the truth of who this guy really
was.
texasmonthly.com: What do you expect Perry’s
reaction will be to this piece?
SG: I try not to think about how people will
react to stories I write. The idea is to be fair to the person
you are writing about, and I always try to be
fair.
Copyright
© 1973-2009
Emmis Publishing LP
dba Texas Monthly. All rights reserved.
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