Bill Clements
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Bill Clements | |
43rd and 45th Governor of Texas
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In office January 16, 1979 – January 18, 1983 January 20, 1987 – January 15, 1991 |
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Lieutenant(s) | William P. "Bill" Hobby, Jr., (D) Bob Bullock (D) |
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Preceded by | Dolph Briscoe (D) Mark Wells White (D) |
Succeeded by | Mark Wells White (D) Dorothy Ann Willis Richards (D) |
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Born | April 17 1917 (age 89) Dallas, Texas |
Political party | Republican |
Profession | Oil driller |
William Perry "Bill" Clements, Jr. (born April 17, 1917) is the first Republican to have served as governor of the U.S. state of Texas since Reconstruction. He was governor for two nonconsecutive terms from 1979-1983 and 1987-1991.
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[edit] Early career
Clements was born in Dallas and worked as an oil driller for many years. He founded SEDCO, the world's largest offshore drilling company. He entered politics as the United States Deputy Secretary of Defense under Presidents Nixon and Ford, in the latter administration under Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld (1975-77; 2001-2006).
[edit] Texas' first GOP governor since Reconstruction
In 1979, Clements succeeded Democrat Dolph Briscoe of Uvalde, located west of San Antonio, to become governor. To win the governorship, he first defeated state Representative Ray Hutchison in the Republican primary by a lopsided vote of 115,345 to 38,268. Hutchison, a prominent Dallas attorney, is the husband of State Treasurer (1991-1993) and U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, who has served since 1993. Clements won the November 1978 general election by narrowly defeating Democratic former Supreme Court Chief Justice John L. Hill. Clements polled 1,183,828 votes (49.96 percent) to Hill's 1,166,919 ballots (49.24 percent). The La Raza nominee, Mario C. Compean, and two other minor candidates shared 18,942 ballots. Clements' margin over Hill was 16,909. Therefore, Clements fell just under a simple majority, making him another "minority governor." The more liberal Hill, who had also once been the appointed secretary of state, had defeated Briscoe on the primary.
In winning, Clements ran 350,158 ballots behind the defeated 1972 GOP nominee, Henry C. Grover, because turnout was much lower in the 1978 off-year election than it had been during a presidential election. The 1972 Texas governor's race was the last to coincide with a presidential election because when the terms went to four years, the gubernatorial elections were also set to coincide with the off years between presidential elections.
Clements ran for reelection in 1982, but he was defeated by Democratic Attorney General Mark Wells White by more than 200,000 votes because of sagging economic indicators and weak support from minority voters, who customarily choose Democratic candidates. White received 1,697,870 (53.2 percent) to Clements' 1,465,537 (45.9 percent).
[edit] Staging the 1986 comeback
In between his two terms as governor, Clements was chairman of the board of trustees of Southern Methodist University in Dallas. He ran again in 1986 and won a contested GOP primary against Congressman Thomas Loeffler of New Branunfels, the seat of Comal County, and former Democratic turned Republican Congressman Kent Hance of Lubbock. In the fall, Clements unseated Governor White, who was hurt by the unpopularity of the "no pass/no play" policy involving high school athletics. In gaining his second term, Clements polled 1,813,779 ballots (52.7 percent) to White's 1,584,512 (46.1 percent). Clements had turned the tables on White in a near mathematical reversal of the 1982 results.
[edit] Clements as governor
Clements' second term was marred by his admission, shortly after his election, that the SMU board had been aware and approved of continuing payments to athletes in violation of NCAA rules.
During his tenure, Clements worked to reduce crime, improve education and the state's economy and worked to improve local relations with Mexico, especially on issues important to their mutual borders, like immigration and the drug war. While Clements was governor, Charlie Brooks, Jr., was the first inmate ever to be executed by lethal injection (December 1982). Clements faced heavily Democratic state legislatures during his tenure. In 1979, the legislature overrode one of his vetoes, the last time that Texas lawmakers have completed an override.
Clements finished his term, opted not to run for a third term as governor, and was succeeded in 1991 by Democratic state Treasurer Dorothy Ann Willis Richards (1933-2006).
Since leaving the governorship, Clements has lent considerable personal effort to support a variety of Republican candidates seeking office in Texas. He resides in Dallas with his second wife, Rita Crocker Clements, who was first lady of Texas during both of his administrations. She was subsequently appointed to the University of Texas Regents by Governor George W. Bush. Clements is known for his ascerbic, energetic personality, which Democrats abhorred but Republicans tended to cheer. In 1993, he had supported the conservative Congressman Joe Barton in the special election for the U.S. Senate to succeed newly-resigned Democrat Lloyd Millard Bentsen, Jr. Barton lost out to Kay Bailey Hutchison. Clements also supported the embattled Texas Supreme Court Justice Steven Smith, who was purged by Governor Richard "Rick" Perry in the 2004 Republican primary. In 2006, Clements was raising funds for prospective 2008 presidential candidate, U.S. Senator John McCain of Arizona.
Preceded by David Packard |
Deputy Secretary of Defense 1971-1977 |
Succeeded by Charles W. Duncan, Jr. |
Preceded by Dolph Briscoe |
Governor of Texas 1979-1983 |
Succeeded by Mark White |
Preceded by Mark White |
Governor of Texas 1987-1991 |
Succeeded by Ann Richards |
Governors of Texas | |
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J.P. Henderson • Wood • Bell • J.W. Henderson • Pease • Runnels • Houston • Clark • Lubbock • Murrah • Stockdale • Hamilton • Throckmorton • Pease • Davis • Coke • Hubbard • Roberts • Ireland • Ross • Hogg • Culberson • Sayers • Lanham • Campbell • Colquitt • J. Ferguson • Hobby • Neff • M. Ferguson • Moody • Sterling • M. Ferguson • Allred • O'Daniel • Stevenson • Jester • Shivers • Daniel • Connally • Smith • Briscoe • Clements • White • Clements • Richards • Bush • Perry |