Ross Perot’s Son Donated to Trump’s 2020 Campaign Before His Father’s Death

Ross Perot’s Son Donated to Trump’s 2020 Campaign Before His Father’s Death
Ross Perot in a file photo. The Associated Press
Zachary Stieber
Updated:

Ross Perot’s son donated thousands of dollars to President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign before his death, according to federal election records.

According to the Federal Election Commission, Perot Jr. wrote two checks to Trump on March 19. The amount for each was the maximum legal amount.
According to the Center for Responsible Politics, an individual can give $2,800 to each candidate per election. The election records show Perot donated $2,800 to Trump for the 2020 primary and another $2,800 to Trump for the general election.
The donation was confirmed to be from Perot Jr., not Perot Sr., by a family spokesman speaking to Fox News.
Perot Jr’s father, Ross Perot Sr., died on July 9 at the age of 89.
Presidential hopeful Henry Ross Perot speaks at a rally in Austin, Texas, in 1992. (File Photo/AP)
Presidential hopeful Henry Ross Perot speaks at a rally in Austin, Texas, in 1992. File Photo/AP

A number of articles listed Perot as making way for Trump with his bold independent bid for president, which included getting 19 percent of the vote in 1992.

“Perot not only showed Trump how to run as a populist for president but also how to use cable news to build a brand, frame a nationalist agenda around opposing free trade, and, yes, how to use Mexico as a political foil,” according to the Boston Globe.
The conservative National Review website, which openly opposes Trump, shared a similar sentiment.

“Like Perot, President Trump is also a billionaire populist and a trade protectionist. Trump appeals to the same secular, nationalist voters that were Perot’s base. But Trump also appealed to and made pacts with all the factions of the Republican party,” the Review wrote.

“Of its billionaire populists, America chose the reality-TV show star and New York real-estate figure over the Texas naval veteran and entrepreneur.

Ross Perot is shown on a screen in a paid 30-minute television commercial, during a media preview in Dallas on Oct. 16, 1992. (File Photo/AP)
Ross Perot is shown on a screen in a paid 30-minute television commercial, during a media preview in Dallas on Oct. 16, 1992. File Photo/AP

More About Perot

As a boy in Texarkana, Texas, Perot delivered newspapers from the back of a pony. He earned his billions in a more modern way, however—by building Electronic Data Systems Corp., which helped other companies manage their computer networks.

Yet the most famous event in his career didn’t involve sales and earnings; he financed a private commando raid in 1979 to free two EDS employees who were being held in a prison in Iran. The tale was turned into a book and a movie.

Perot first became known to Americans outside of business circles by claiming that the U.S. government left behind hundreds of American soldiers who were missing or imprisoned at the end of the Vietnam War.

Perot’s wealth, fame and confident prescription for the nation’s economic ills propelled his 1992 campaign against President George H.W. Bush and Democratic challenger Bill Clinton.

Former President George H.W. Bush, left, talks with independent candidate Ross Perot as Democratic candidate Bill Clinton stands aside at the end of their second presidential debate in Richmond, Va., on Oct. 15, 1992. (Marcy Nighswander/File Photo/AP)
Former President George H.W. Bush, left, talks with independent candidate Ross Perot as Democratic candidate Bill Clinton stands aside at the end of their second presidential debate in Richmond, Va., on Oct. 15, 1992. Marcy Nighswander/File Photo/AP

During the campaign, Perot spent $63.5 million of his own money and bought up 30-minute television spots. He used charts and graphs to make his points, summarizing them with a line that became a national catchphrase: “It’s just that simple.”

Perot’s second campaign four years later was far less successful. He was shut out of presidential debates when organizers said he lacked sufficient support. He got just 8 percent of the vote, and the Reform Party that he founded and hoped to build into a national political force began to fall apart.

However, Perot’s ideas on trade and deficit reduction remained part of the political landscape. He blamed both major parties for running up a huge federal budget deficit and letting American jobs to be sent to other countries. The movement of U.S. jobs to Mexico, he said, created a “giant sucking sound.”

Perot continued to speak out about federal spending for many years. In 2008, he launched a website to highlight the nation’s debt with a ticker that tracked the rising total, a blog, and a chart presentation.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that Ross Perot Sr. donated to President Donald Trump. The Epoch Times regrets the error.
Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber
Senior Reporter
Zachary Stieber is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times based in Maryland. He covers U.S. and world news. Contact Zachary at [email protected]
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