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  • 2010-09-03 (xsd:date)
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  • Bill White says Perry is a 25-year incumbent (en)
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  • The major gubernatorial candidates seem to get their kicks out of plastering each other with derogatory labels. In Gov. Rick Perry's campaign statements, his Democratic rival is liberal trial lawyer Bill White . To White's campaign, the GOP governor is part-time Perry . Another White tactic: bringing attention to Perry's many years as an elected official by calling him a career politician. Perhaps in that spirit, a Wednesday press release from White linking Perry and a widely expected state budget shortfall pokes at Perry's longevity in an eye-catching secondary headline: 25 year incumbent focuses on re-election instead of issues. White spokeswoman Katy Bacon told us in an e-mail that the Wednesday reference was to Perry's time in one office or another. Indeed, Perry's biography on his state website says his political career started in 1985. That's the year after he was elected as a Democrat to the Texas House of Representatives from a West Texas district. He served three two-year terms, switching to the Republican Party in 1989. (When we peeked earlier this week, the Perry bio on his campaign website said he spent four terms in the House, but his campaign spokeswoman, Catherine Frazier, acknowledged that the correct number is three. The bio has since been corrected.) Perry won election in 1990 as Texas agriculture commissioner, a statewide office he held for two four-year terms. By the end of 1998, Perry had spent 14 years in public office. That year, he won the race for lieutenant governor, and in late 2000, he ascended to the state's highest office when George W. Bush left the governorship to prepare for his swearing-in as president. Perry won re-election to the governor's office in 2002 and 2006. The tally: As of January 2010, Perry had been in one office or another more than 25 years. Then again, White's headline could be taken to mean Perry has been governor all those years, especially because the related press release and video are about his performance as governor. We think that's misleading. Also questionable is White's use of the word incumbent, which implies that Perry was cemented into place a quarter-century ago. According to Webster's New World College Dictionary, an incumbent is the holder of an office or benefice. In common usage, incumbent usually describes someone running for an office that he or she already holds. Bacon said White's campaign was not trying to mislead voters about Perry. Everyone knows he's been the governor for 10 years, she said. Our call: White's poke accurately tabulates Perry's seven-plus terms in four different offices. But describing Perry as a 25-year incumbent in a critique focused on his governorship blurs the fact that most of the time Perry's held office, he's not been governor — or in a single elected position. We rate White's statement Barely True. Editor's note: This statement was rated Barely True when it was published. On July 27, 2011, we changed the name for the rating to Mostly False. (en)
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