Los Angeles Times

Perot, maverick candidate, dies

Candid, colorful Texan made billions of dollars and famously lost a presidenti­al race

- By Scott Martelle Times staff writer Dorany Pineda contribute­d to this report.

Texas billionair­e Ross Perot got nearly 19% of the vote in 1992 run for president.

Adiminutiv­e billionair­e from Texas with a salty personalit­y and a public persona as a straight talker, H. Ross Perot blazed across America in the 1990s as the maverick, third-party presidenti­al candidate who won over nearly 1 out of every 5 voters with his flip charts, pointers and easy cures for the country’s dour economy.

He was an unlikely White House candidate, saddled with a gravelly voice and big ears easily caricature­d by TV comics, and no campaign experience before he launched his uphill presidenti­al bid.

But his algorithms for repairing the economy, preventing jobs from leaving the country and untangling the gridlock he claimed was paralyzing Washington appealed to voters who disdained the perfectly calibrated quotes and focus groups of profession­al politician­s and their consultant­s.

Candid, colorful and cantankero­us until the end, Perot died Tuesday after a five-month battle with leukemia, according to a family spokesman. He was 89.

“In business and in life, Ross was a man of integrity and action,” James Fuller, a representa­tive for the Perot family, said in a statement. “A true American patriot and a man of rare vision, principle and deep compassion, he touched the lives of countless people through his unwavering support of the military and veterans and through his charitable endeavors.”

In his 1992 campaign, Perot captured nearly 19% of the popular vote but no electoral votes, and thus had no effect on the final results. Democrat Bill Clinton won the race against the incumbent president, George H.W. Bush.

During the first debate with Bush and Clinton, the 5-foot-6 Perot delivered a surprising­ly strong performanc­e. Using pithy one-liners and a no-nonsense attitude, he contrasted sharply with his rivals and their practiced delivery, zeroing in on the sour state of the economy and voter distrust of Washington. Most analysts said afterward he had won the debate.

In the second debate, Perot cemented his spot in the history of political one-liners when he predicted the North American Free Trade Agreement would create “a giant sucking sound going south” as business leaders moved jobs to lower-wage nations such as Mexico.

He mounted another insurgent presidenti­al bid in 1996, but that one fell far short of the 1992 effort, ending his run on the national political stage.

Former President George W. Bush, whose father clashed with Perot, praised his fellow Texan on Tuesday as a maverick.

“Texas and America have lost a strong patriot,” Bush said in a statement. “Ross Perot epitomized the entreprene­urial spirit and the American creed.”

Perot later helped finance controvers­ial efforts in the 1970s and ’80s to find and rescue U.S. prisoners of war he believed were being held captive in Vietnam years after the war had ended there. Despite widespread speculatio­n, none ultimately were found and a Senate investigat­ion found “no compelling evidence” that any existed.

He also won fame for financing a rescue operation of workers for his company Electronic Data Systems who had been taken captive in Iran on the eve of the 1979 revolution.

It didn’t hurt Perot’s popularity that his rags-to-riches life ref lected an American archetype, the selfmade man who, through vision and grit, amassed a vast personal fortune.

Perot was an early tech entreprene­ur who founded Electronic Data Systems, his first computer services company, in 1962 with $1,000 in savings. It later became an industry leader.

Even in failure, Perot seemed to have a golden touch. In 1986, two years after General Motors bought EDS for $2.5 billion and gave Perot a seat on the board in hopes his entreprene­urial skills and spirited style would reinvigora­te the bureaucrac­y-heavy corporatio­n, the auto giant essentiall­y paid him $700 million more to go away.

“Revitalizi­ng GM,” Perot said before departing, “is like teaching an elephant to tap dance. You find the sensitive spots and start poking.”

Henry Ross Perot was born June 27, 1930, in Texarkana, Texas, to Gabriel Elias Perot, a cotton broker, and Lulu May Perot, a secretary for a small lumber company. His parents were regarded as strict, and they instilled the Methodist religious faith and a sense of personal ethics in their children.

Perot began working at age 7 and, over time, tamed horses, sold garden seeds and magazines, delivered newspapers and sold classified

ads, and became a trader in horses and horse gear. He also became an Eagle Scout, a point of pride in his adult life.

As a child, Perot was a diligent, if not gifted, student, relying on hard work and a stubborn streak of competitiv­eness to get good grades. “If we had to learn the Roman numerals, Ross would learn them and know them better than anybody else,” childhood friend Hayes McClerkin told the New York Times in a 1996 profile. “When it took dedication and persistenc­e, he was always crossing the goal line ahead of people who probably were smarter.”

Perot attended Texarkana Junior College, where he was elected class president, then in 1949 received an appointmen­t to the U.S. Naval Academy, where he also was twice elected class president.

While studying at Annapolis, he met Margot Birmingham, a student at Goucher College in Baltimore. They married in 1956 and had five children.

Perot graduated from Annapolis, 454th out of 925 cadets, in 1953. He served four years in the Navy, becoming an assistant fire control officer aboard the destroyer Sigourney.

In 1957, Perot joined IBM as a salesman. But IBM’s corporate culture proved too inflexible for him, and after the company rejected his proposal to help customers better use the computers IBM sold them, Perot quit and formed EDT to do just that.

“It became more and more obvious to me: People were buying the hardware, but they didn’t know how to use it,” he once said.

Perot quickly built EDS into a powerful outsourcin­g firm, taking on a wide range of clients but heavy on government contracts, including Medicare and Social Security. The radical Ramparts magazine in 1968 dubbed him “America’s first welfare billionair­e.”

Perot made it a point to hire Korean War veterans.

“We put a very high priority to hiring people coming right off the battlefiel­d,” Perot said in Gerald Posner’s 1996 biography, “Citizen Perot: His Life and Times.”

“They were 27 years old, and 40 in terms of maturity. And no matter how much of a load we placed on them in the training program — and we tried to make it very rigorous — this was a huge cakewalk for them.”

EDS built a reputation for doing the impossible, and doing it quickly. One client, Frito-Lay, hired EDS to install a computer system with a two-year deadline. EDS finished in two months.

Perot maintained tight control of the privately held firm, but in 1968 he took it public. Overnight he was worth $350 million and landed on the cover of Forbes magazine, which called him the “fastest, richest Texan.”

In 1984, Perot agreed to sell EDS to GM. GM chief Roger Smith thought the corporate merger would revolution­ize the auto giant’s legendaril­y slow-to-turn management system. And he hoped Perot would add entreprene­urial zeal to the board.

But clashes arose over a variety of issues, including stock options and lines of responsibi­lity, said Doron P. Levin, a Detroit journalist and author of “Irreconcil­able Difference­s: Ross Perot Versus General Motors.” Perot soon became publicly derisive of GM’s management style and recalcitra­nce, and the corporate marriage failed.

In 1988, Perot was back in business with his Perot Systems Inc., a computer services firm focusing on the healthcare industry. His son succeeded him as chairman in 2004, and the computer giant Dell bought the firm in 2009 for $3.9 billion. At the time of his death, Perot’s net worth was put at $4.1 billion by Forbes.

But it was Perot’s forays into policy and politics that brought him the most notice.

In 1969, Perot met with top aides to President Nixon to discuss the inhumane treatment of American POWs in North Vietnam. That winter, he spent $2 million to rent two jets, which he filled with medicine, Christmas presents, letters and other goods for the POWs. The goodwill flights were rebuffed by the North Vietnamese, but some of the POWs later said their living conditions improved after Perot’s effort.

Perot engaged in more direct action in February 1979 after two EDS workers in Iran were taken prisoner at the start of the Iranian Revolution. Perot put together a rescue operation that involved a fake prison riot that diverted guards and allowed the two men to escape. The incident led to Ken Follett’s bestsellin­g “On Wings of Eagles” and an ensuing television miniseries.

Perot continued to press the issue of the fate of missing soldiers in the 1980s, leading private investigat­ions into government actions and policies, and eventually accusing federal officials of a cover-up. In 1989, he engaged in direct secret talks with Vietnamese leaders with the blessing of the Reagan administra­tion, but little came of it.

Despite his public persona as a straight-talking moralist, Perot was dogged by allegation­s that he engaged in personal vendettas. They included threatenin­g to use compromisi­ng photograph­s against political opponents; paying a Washington law firm $10,000 to investigat­e a $48-million tax break given to Pennzoil, run by a former business partner of George H.W. Bush; and investigat­ing rumors that President Reagan and Bush, his running mate and former CIA director, had engineered a delay in the release of American hostages held in Iran until after the 1980 election.

Perot said he liked to “stir things up,” and he did so with historical flair on March 16, 1992, when he announced on CNN that if supporters did the legwork to get him on the ballot in all 50 states, he would mount a third-party campaign for the White House.

By July he had backed off the pledge and said he wasn’t running, but supporters kept working on the petitions, and by October, Perot had jumped back into the race.

In the end, exit polls showed he had drawn equally from supporters of Bush and Clinton. Although he gave voters an alternativ­e to the two main political parties, he had no influence on the outcome.

In recent years, Perot lived quietly in the Dallas area, in some ways trying to live out a dream he outlined after GM bought him out.

“See, I’m going to do whatever I want to do with the rest of my life,” Perot told the Washington Post in 1987. “And in the end, well, there was this guy here in south Texas named Hondo Crouch who died in Luckenbach, Texas, dancing with a pretty girl when he was 94. Now my dream is to die dancing with my wife, Margot, when I’m 94.”

Perot is survived by his wife, Margot; sister Bette; son, Ross Jr.; daughters, Nancy, Suzanne, Carolyn and Katherine; 16 grandchild­ren; and three stepgrandc­hildren.

 ?? Marcy Nighswande­r Associated Press ?? INDEPENDEN­T CANDIDATE Ross Perot, center, went up against President George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton in the Oct. 15, 1992, presidenti­al debate. At one point, he predicted the North American Free Trade Agreement would create “a giant sucking sound going south.”
Marcy Nighswande­r Associated Press INDEPENDEN­T CANDIDATE Ross Perot, center, went up against President George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton in the Oct. 15, 1992, presidenti­al debate. At one point, he predicted the North American Free Trade Agreement would create “a giant sucking sound going south.”
 ?? Paul J. Richards AFP/Getty Images ?? HUSBAND AND WIFE Ross and Margot Perot at a campaign rally. They married in 1956 and had five children. Ross Perot said in 1987: “Now my dream is to die dancing with my wife, Margot, when I’m 94.”
Paul J. Richards AFP/Getty Images HUSBAND AND WIFE Ross and Margot Perot at a campaign rally. They married in 1956 and had five children. Ross Perot said in 1987: “Now my dream is to die dancing with my wife, Margot, when I’m 94.”
 ?? Ferd Kaufman Associated Press ?? TECH PIONEER Perot, shown in 1968, founded Electronic Data Systems, his first computer services firm, in 1962 with $1,000 in savings.
Ferd Kaufman Associated Press TECH PIONEER Perot, shown in 1968, founded Electronic Data Systems, his first computer services firm, in 1962 with $1,000 in savings.

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