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Rick Perry Fast Facts
2022-02-24 00:00:00.0     美国有线电视-特朗普新闻     原网页

       Here is a look at the life of former US Secretary of Energy and former Texas Governor Rick Perry.

       Personal

       Birth date: March 4, 1950

       Birth place: Paint Creek, Texas

       Birth name: James Richard Perry

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       Father: Joseph Ray Perry, a farmer

       Mother: Amelia (Holt) Perry

       Marriage: Anita (Thigpen) Perry (November 6, 1982-present)

       Children: Sydney and Griffin

       Education: Texas A&M University, B.S., 1972

       Military Service: US Air Force, 1972-1977, Captain

       Religion: Methodist

       Other Facts

       Is an Eagle Scout.

       Met his wife, Anita, in elementary school.

       Is the longest serving governor in Texas history.

       Timeline

       1972-1977 - Serves in the US Air Force flying transport planes.

       1977 - Returns to Texas to live and work on his father's farm.

       1978 - Forms JR Perry Farms with his father.

       1985- 1991 - Member of the Texas House of Representatives as a Democrat from the 64th District.

       1989 - Switches to the Republican Party.

       1991-1999 - Commissioner of the Texas Department of Agriculture.

       1999-2000 - Lieutenant Governor of Texas.

       December 21, 2000 - Perry is sworn in as governor after George W. Bush resigns to become president of the United States.

       November 5, 2002 - Perry is elected to a four-year term.

       November 7, 2006 - Is reelected governor.

       2008 - Perry's book "On My Honor: Why the American Values of the Boy Scouts Are Worth Fighting For" is published.

       November 2, 2010 - Perry is elected for a third term in office.

       August 13, 2011 - Declares his candidacy for president during a speech in South Carolina.

       January 19, 2012 - Suspends his presidential campaign and endorses Newt Gingrich.

       July 8, 2013 - Announces that he will not run for reelection as Texas governor in 2014.

       August 15, 2014 - A grand jury indicts Perry on charges of coercion of a public servant and abuse of his official capacity. He allegedly threatened to veto funding for a statewide public integrity unit run by Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg unless she resigned following her arrest on a drunk driving charge. She stayed in office, and he later vetoed the funding.

       August 19, 2014 - Perry voluntarily appears at the Travis County Court house to be booked and fingerprinted and to have his mug shot taken. He pleads not guilty to charges of coercion of a public servant and abuse of official capacity. The next day he makes the first of six campaign style stops across New Hampshire.

       November 18, 2014 - A state district judge in Texas denies a defense motion to have two felony charges dismissed against Perry.

       January 15, 2015 - Delivers his farewell address as governor.

       June 4, 2015 - Announces he is running for president at a rally in Addison, Texas.

       July 24, 2015 - A Texas appeals court dismisses one of two criminal charges against Perry. The court agrees with the argument from Perry's legal team that a Texas law concerning "coercion of a public servant" violates Perry's First Amendment freedom of speech rights. The court is allowing a charge related to abuse of power to move forward.

       September 11, 2015 - Suspends his campaign for the presidency.

       January 25, 2016 - Perry endorses Ted Cruz.

       February 24, 2016 - The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals drops charges against Perry alleging he abused his power while in office.

       August 30, 2016 - Perry is revealed as one of the members of the upcoming 23rd season of reality television dance competition "Dancing with the Stars" on ABC.

       September 27, 2016 - Is eliminated from "Dancing With The Stars."

       November 22, 2016 - Returns to "Dancing With The Stars" for the season finale. Perry dances with Vanilla Ice during a live performance of "Ice Ice Baby."

       December 13, 2016 - President-elect Donald Trump announces he has selected Perry to be his nominee for energy secretary.

       January 19, 2017 - Perry says that he regrets recommending the elimination of the Department of Energy during a presidential debate in 2012.

       March 2, 2017 - Perry is confirmed as energy secretary with a 62-37 vote in the Senate.

       July 26, 2017 - Perry's office acknowledges that he was the target of a prank call on July 19. During the 20-minute call from Russian pranksters, real names Vladimir Krasnov and Aleksey Stolyarov, respectively, one pretends to be Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman.

       February 5, 2019 - Is named the designated survivor for Trump's second State of the Union address. As the one member of the Cabinet remaining outside the House chamber during the speech in case disaster strikes, Perry will remain in an undisclosed location.

       October 10, 2019 - House Democrats issue a subpoena to Perry for documents related to the Trump administration's contacts with Ukraine as part of the ongoing House impeachment inquiry.

       October 17, 2019 - Perry says he plans to resign in a video posted to YouTube.

       November 20, 2019 - Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland testifies that he, along with special envoy for Ukraine Kurt Volker and Perry, worked with Giuliani on Ukraine at the "express direction" of Trump and against their better judgment. Sondland also tells lawmakers that he had discussed the investigation in a July 19 email sent to several top US officials, including Perry. In response, the Department of Energy releases a statement denying Sondland's claims, saying he "misrepresented both Secretary Perry's interaction with Rudy Giuliani and direction the Secretary received from President Trump."

       December 1, 2019 - Perry resigns as US Secretary of Energy.

       January 1, 2020 - Perry is appointed as a director of the general partner that controls Energy Transfer LP, a pipeline company.

       February 17, 2021 - In a blog post on House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy's website, Perry is quoted as saying "partly rhetorically," that "Texans would be without electricity for longer than three days to keep the federal government out of their business." Millions of Texans lost power as the state experienced a massive failure brought on by a historic freeze and a power grid that -- unlike the other 47 contiguous states -- is separated from the rest of the country and is not under federal regulatory oversight, which prevents Texas from being able to borrow power from other states.

       December 17, 2021 - January 6 House committee investigators believe that a November 4 text pushing 'strategy' to undermine the presidential election came from Perry, three sources familiar with the investigation tell CNN. First presented on the House floor December 14, the text was included in about 6,000 documents turned over to the committee by former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. Perry denies being the author.

       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Former Texas Governor Rick Perry addresses the 42nd annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) February 27 in National Harbor, Maryland.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Former Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks to guests at the Iowa Freedom Summit on January 24 in Des Moines, Iowa. The summit is hosting a group of potential 2016 Republican presidential candidates to discuss core conservative principles ahead of the January 2016 Iowa Caucuses.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Former Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks during the victory party for Texas Attorney General and Republican gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott after an apparent victory over Democratic Sen. Wendy Davis on November 4, 2014, in Austin, Texas.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry was booked on August 19, 2014, on two felony charges related to his handling of a local political controversy. He vowed to fight the charges.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry compares alcoholism to homosexuality at an event in San Francisco on June 11, 2014. "I may have the genetic coding that I'm inclined to be an alcoholic, but I have the desire not to do that - and I look at the homosexual issue the same way," he said.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry greets President Barack Obama as he arrives in Dallas on July 9, 2014, for a meeting with local elected officials and faith leaders about the humanitarian situation at the Southwest border.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry salutes after announcing on January 19, 2012, that he's suspending his presidential campaign just days before South Carolina's GOP primary. Perry finished sixth in the New Hampshire primary earlier that month.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry runs the Veterans Day parade route in Columbia, South Carolina, while local media and his security detail jog along to keep up on November 11, 2011.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       At a GOP presidential debate on November 9, 2011, Perry fails to remember the third of three agencies he would cut if elected president. With self-deprecation he uttered "oops," a word that has since made him the butt of jokes, including his own.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry labels Social Security a "Ponzi scheme" at a GOP primary debate on September 7, 2011, in Simi Valley, California. "Anybody that's for the status quo with Social Security today is involved with a monstrous lie to our kids, and it's not right," he said.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       In the inaugural stages of his 2012 presidential run, Perry mingles with a breakfast crowd during a campaign stop at Bazen's Family Restaurant in Florence, South Carolina, on August 19, 2011.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       During a Florida primary debate, Perry defended a Texas program that allows students without legal documentation to take advantage of in-state tuition and argued those who disagree with him are heartless.

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       Photos: Moments from Rick Perry's career

       Perry, then the lieutenant governor of Texas, hugs George W. Bush before being sworn in as governor on December 21, 2000, in Austin. Bush had been elected president and was resigning as governor.

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