fbpx
Wikipedia

Tom Pauken

Thomas Weir Pauken (born January 11, 1944) is an American politician and member of the Republican Party.

Tom Pauken
Member of the Texas Workforce Commission for Employers
In office
March 1, 2008 – March 1, 2013
GovernorRick Perry
Preceded byRon Lehman
Succeeded byEsperanza Andrade
Chair of the Texas Workforce Commission
In office
March 1, 2008 – May 1, 2012
GovernorRick Perry
Preceded byDiane Rath
Succeeded byAndres Alcantar
Chairman of the Republican Party of Texas
In office
1994–1997
Preceded byFred Meyer
Succeeded bySusan Weddington
Personal details
Born
Thomas Weir Pauken

(1944-01-11) January 11, 1944 (age 80)
Victoria, Texas, U.S.
Political partyRepublican (1965–present)
SpouseIda Ayala
Children7
Alma materGeorgetown University
Southern Methodist University
WebsiteOfficial website
Military service
AllegianceUnited States of America
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1967–1970
Battles/warsVietnam War

Pauken is a former member and chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission. A former long-term resident of Dallas, who now resides in the resort community of Port Aransas in Nueces County on the Texas Gulf Coast,[1] Pauken is a businessman, lawyer, and the author of two books. He served as chairman of the Texas Republican Party from 1994 to 1997 during the transition period when the party leaped quickly from minority to majority status at the statewide level. A staunch conservative, Pauken also served on President Ronald W. Reagan's White House staff.

On August 21, 2006, Governor Rick Perry named Pauken to chairman the Texas Task Force on Appraisal Reform (TFAR) to study and make recommendations on how to address Texans' continuing concerns over property appraisals.[2] In March 2008, Perry appointed Pauken chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC),[3] which administers state unemployment compensation benefits, provides workforce development services, and maintains and issues state labor market data.

During his time as TWC chairman, which ended in May 2012, Pauken oversaw the development of the Texas Back to Work program and the Texas Veterans Leadership Program (TVLP).[4]

He was a candidate for governor in 2014 but withdrew early in the contest and supported Greg Abbott, the state attorney general and the party nominee in the November 4 general election.[5]

Education and personal life edit

Pauken was born on January 11, 1944, in Victoria, Texas. A graduate of the Jesuit High School in Dallas, Pauken attended Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., from which he received his Bachelor of Arts in political science in 1965. From 1967 to 1970, he served in the United States Army, with a tour of duty in Vietnam. He obtained his Juris Doctor degree from Southern Methodist University in Dallas in 1973.

Pauken is married to Ida Ayala, and the couple has seven children: Thomas, Michelle, Angela, Elizabeth, Daniel, Monica, and Victoria. The Paukens are Roman Catholic.

Georgetown University, College Republicans, Vietnam edit

Pauken entered Georgetown University in 1961 and became involved in politics as a "foot soldier in a small but growing conservative army" that was known for their support of the U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater.[6]

Pauken was elected national chairman of College Republicans and served from 1965 to 1967. The issue of the Vietnam War dominated his time as chairman; Pauken organized the bipartisan National Student Committee for the Defense of Vietnam. The group collected more than half a million signatures from students across the nation for a petition expressing support for American soldiers in Vietnam that was presented to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.[7]

Upon completion of his term as the chairman of College Republicans, Pauken enlisted in the Army, because "I knew . . . I would be nothing but a hypocrite if I ducked my own obligation to serve."[8] Pauken served as a military intelligence officer in Vietnam and returned to America at the end of December, 1969[9][10]

Reagan White House edit

Pauken was asked to serve on President Reagan's transition team after the 1980 election. On February 3, 1981, Pauken was nominated by Reagan to serve as director of the ACTION agency, now known as AmeriCorps.[11] Under Pauken's leadership, the staff at ACTION was reduced from 1,000 to 500 and the budget was reduced 25%, from $160 million to $120 million.[12] Pauken also ended ACTION's funding of liberal organizations, many of whom had ties to Saul Alinsky.[9][12]

During his tenure at ACTION, Pauken established the Vietnam Veterans Leadership Program" an organization "created for Vietnam Veterans and led by Vietnam Veterans who were committed to helping our fellow veterans who were unemployed, underemployed, or who had lingering problems associated with their Vietnam experience."[7]

At ACTION, Pauken oversaw the implementation of the Just Say No to Drugs program in which Nancy Reagan served as chief spokeswoman. He was awarded the Ronald Reagan Medal of Honor by Reagan administration alumni.

In 1985, Pauken left the Reagan administration to return to Texas to enter private business. He joined a Dallas-based venture capital company in 1986.[13]

Chairmanship of the Texas GOP edit

In 1994, Pauken was elected chairman of his state party organization with strong support from Reagan conservatives and social conservatives disenchanted with the so-called "stand-patism" and moderation of the outgoing chairman, Fred Meyer, an ally of former President George H. W. Bush. Pauken won the chairmanship by defeating a last-minute challenge waged by still serving U.S. Representative Joe Barton of Ennis, whose district at the time stretched from the Dallas southern suburbs to Bryan-College Station.

During Pauken's tenure as chairman, the Republican Party gained majority status in Texas, and he was re-elected chairman in 1996. He chaired the Texas delegation to the Republican National Convention in 1996.[14]

The party continued to experience divisions between its establishment faction and its conservative wing. In 1996, Bill Price, a social conservative who had opposed Pauken when he ran for state chairman in 1994, led an effort to deny the naming of U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in San Diego, California, on the grounds that Hutchison is not pro-life. Pauken supported the selection of Hutchison as a delegate to the national convention, and she was elected a delegate at the state convention. The issue became divisive at the state convention even though Senator Robert Dole already had secured enough delegates to win the Republican nomination for president.

Chairmanship of Texas Workforce Commission edit

Pauken served as chairman of Texas Workforce Commission from March 2008 through April 2012. Upon the completion of his tenure as chairman, Pauken remained at TWC as the commissioner representing employers. During his tenure he established the Texas Veterans Leadership Program (TVLP).[15] TVLP is led and staffed by veterans of the wars of Iraq and Afghanistan and provides outreach to returning veterans from those wars aimed at helping the veterans to find employment. As of March 2012, about eight thousand returning veterans have received assistance from the program.

Pauken also initiated the creation of the Texas Back to Work program, which offers an incentive of up to $2,000 to employers for hiring qualified out-of-work Texans who lost their job through no fault of their own. More than 25,000 workers have obtained jobs through the program, which received the Unemployment Insurance Innovation Award for Reemployment in October 2010.[16]

From the start of his tenure as chairman, Pauken has been a vocal advocate of the need to rebuild the American manufacturing industry and to place greater emphasis on the skilled trades, especially at the secondary school level.

Pauken announced his retirement from TWC effective March 1, 2013.

Political campaigns edit

In 1978, Pauken challenged the freshman Democratic Representative Jim Mattox of Dallas for Texas's 5th congressional district seat in the United States House of Representatives, a position held by earlier Republicans Bruce Reynolds Alger and Alan Steelman. Mattox was assisted in his campaign by visits from President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalyn Smith Carter. Pauken offered a conservative alternative in sharp contrast to Mattox. The Democrat prevailed, with 35,524 votes (50 percent) to Pauken's 34,672 (49 percent). In their rematch in 1980, Pauken lost by 3,044 votes: 70,892 (51 percent) to 67,848 (49 percent). While Ronald Reagan was a winner in the Fifth District, he had no presidential coattails sufficient to lift Pauken to victory.

After the congressional losses, Pauken joined the transition team of President-elect Reagan. After his tenure at ACTION and his return to Texas, Reagan called upon Pauken again on April 22, 1987, to become a director of the Inter-American Foundation.

Pauken ran again for the U.S. House in a special election after Steve Bartlett resigned to run for mayor of Dallas. Sam Johnson defeated Pauken, with 24,004 votes (52.6 percent) to 21,647 (47.4 percent).

In 1998 Pauken lost his bid in the Republican primary for the Attorney General of Texas.

In 2010, Pauken endorsed Perry for renomination in his successful race against Senator Hutchison and for reelection in the fall campaign against the Democrat Bill White, a former mayor of Houston, Texas. However, Pauken remained neutral in Perry's unsuccessful bid for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.[1]

As book author edit

Pauken is the author of two books, The Thirty Years War: The Politics of the Sixties Generation and Bringing American Home: How America Lost Her Way and How We Can Find Our Way Back.

Published in 1995, The Thirty Years War is a memoir in which Pauken explains his involvement in politics beginning in the 1960s. The book traces Pauken's early interest in politics as a debater at Jesuit High School in Dallas; his time at Georgetown in which he was embroiled in the campus conflicts over the Vietnam War; his service in Vietnam and frustration with the execution of the war; his work for and ultimate disillusionment with the Richard M. Nixon White House, and his time in Reagan administration when he was director of ACTION. The noted conservative reporter and commentator Robert Novak, wrote in a foreword to the book, that The Thirty Years War demonstrates how "Pauken believes in what he says, and performs accordingly..."[17] Novak concluded by writing that "Tom Pauken cherishes and nourishes the dangerous idea that the Republican Party should stand for something. He gives every indication that after fighting for 30 years, he is just getting his second wind."[18]

In Bringing America Home (2010), Pauken outlines what he believes to be the causes of America's economic downturn, misguided foreign policy, and moral decline. Like the columnist and former presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan, Pauken places much of the blame on neoconservatives within the Republican Party leadership. He outlines a plan for addressing the nation's ills rooted in the Founding Fathers and traditional conservative principles. Booklist described the book as a "conservative manifesto of the highest caliber—humane, civilized, expressed by an active, living conscience."[19] Bringing America Home argues that the George W. Bush presidential administration squandered the conservative political capital of the Goldwater-Reagan years.

As political commentator edit

Pauken is a frequent political commentator on Texas radio stations and television programs in addition to regular speeches to civic clubs and conventions. He is also a guest opinion column contributor to several Texas newspapers and blogs. Pauken is a regular contributor to Chronicles, a paleoconservative magazine published by the Rockford Institute in Rockford, Illinois.

On property taxation edit

On April 26, 2006, Pauken endorsed the Texas Tax Reform Commission's plan for property tax relief and business tax reform. A portion of his statement follows:

"Those who know me know that I have never been shy about encouraging elected leaders to adhere to the Republican Party's conservative philosophy when dealing with the issue of taxes. As former chairman of the Republican Party of Texas, a former member of the Reagan administration and a conservative, grassroots activist for more than four decades, I have been unequivocal in my support for conservative tax reform, even if the byproduct is a few ruffled feathers. There is no doubt that, if this plan flouted conservative principles, I would be among the first to publicly call for its defeat. Instead, I am urging lawmakers to adopt this plan as soon as possible because it would be a tremendous victory for Texas homeowners and taxpayers. At the same time, this legislation encourages job creation and economic growth, particularly in the manufacturing sector."[20]

The proposal was adopted near the close of the special session of the Texas Legislature, which met a June 1, 2006, deadline, set by the Texas Supreme Court in regard to school funding.

On education reform edit

In mid-2012, Pauken emerged as a leading opponent of Texas' current model of mandatory testing and college preparation. Pauken contended a system of "test learning" de-emphasizes a more wholistic educational approach and leads to a higher number of dropouts. He proposed a multi-pathway system by which high school students can learn career-centric math and science skills, while earning certifications and licenses in their preferred fields. Each pathway would lead to the same diploma, and college preparation would still be an emphasis for students who wish to pursue higher education.[2] Several of these reforms appeared in the Pauken-supported Texas House Bill 5, which became law in June 2013.

Pauken said in an op-ed appearing in the Texas Tribune: "For those on the career path, certification or licensure in their fields is the best way to show whether or not their education was successful. And for those going to a university, there is no reason we can't use the same tests that universities use in determining admission, like the SAT or ACT. Performance measures ought to be tied to the actual outcomes that we seek for our students." [3]

2014 gubernatorial campaign edit

Pauken announced his gubernatorial candidacy on March 21, 2013. His decision to seek the governorship, he indicated, is not predicated on what other candidates may also enter the field, meaning Governor Perry, a potential candidate for reelection to a fourth full term, and Attorney General Greg Abbott, now in his third term in that position. Pauken said that he wants to end "crony capitalism" and repair long-term problems of public education.

"We just need a different style of leadership and a different approach to addressing the issues," Pauken said.[1] He vowed to run a common-sense issues campaign, not one based on "consultant-driven sound bites".[1]

He withdrew from the race on December 5, 2013, citing his "financial and organizational" difficulties and the lack of a "realistic path to victory".[5]

Pauken supports term limits for state officials.[1] and opposes the "Robin Hood" transfer of money from property-rich school districts to those with fewer resources. He claims that the state should make up the difference in funding between the wealthier and the poorer districts in a "revenue-neutral" fashion by replacing a portion of property taxes with consumption taxes or by expanding the sales tax. He supports expanded vocational education, greater local control of schools, and reduced emphasis on standardized testing.[21]

Pauken said that when he ran for state GOP chairman in 1994, "We didn't have much money and we had (political operative) Karl Rove against me and (U.S. Senator) Phil Gramm—the entire establishment—against us. And we won."[21]

In 1998, the last time that Pauken sought elected office, he finished with 30 percent in a three-candidate field for the office of Texas attorney general.[22] The winner of the primary runoff election was John Cornyn, the state's current senior U.S. senator and a candidate for reelection to a third term in 2014. Coincidentally, the Democrat that Cornyn defeated in the general election held on November 3, 1998, was former Attorney General Jim Mattox,[23] the same candidate who had defeated Pauken for the Dallas-based congressional seat in 1978 and 1980.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Jonathan Tilove, "Longtime GOP leader Tom Pauken to run for governor". statesman.com. Retrieved March 21, 2013.
  2. ^ . Governor.state.tx.us. Archived from the original on 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  3. ^ . Governor.state.tx.us. Archived from the original on 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  4. ^ . Office of the Governor. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 26 April 2012.Pauken resigned as a TWC Commissioner in March 2013.
  5. ^ a b . The Dallas Morning News. 5 December 2013. Archived from the original on 8 December 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  6. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson Books, Inc. p. 26. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  7. ^ a b Pauken, Tom. (PDF). Texas Workforce Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 15, 2012. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  8. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. 53. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  9. ^ a b "Tom Pauken: Bringing America Home". Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  10. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. 81. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  11. ^ Reagan, Ronald. "Nomination of Thomas W. Pauken To Be Director of ACTION". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  12. ^ a b Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. 171. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  13. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. 194. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  14. ^ Burka, Paul. . Burka Blog. Texas Monthly. Archived from the original on February 18, 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  15. ^ Pauken, Tom. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 23, 2012.
  16. ^ (PDF). Texas Workforce Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 20, 2011. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  17. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. x. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  18. ^ Pauken, Thomas (1995). The Thirty Years War. Ottawa, IL: Jameson Books, Inc. p. xiii. ISBN 0-915463-66-0.
  19. ^ Olson, Ray (2010). Booklist. ISBN 978-0984370207.
  20. ^ Pauken, Tom. "PERRY/SHARP PLAN: A TAX HIKE OR A TAX CUT?". Dallasblog.com. Retrieved 8 May 2012.[dead link]
  21. ^ a b "Former Texas GOP chairman Tom Pauken to run for governor, March 21, 2013". dallasnews.com. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  22. ^ . elections.sos.state.tx.us. Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  23. ^ . elections.sos.state.tx.us. Archived from the original on January 9, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2013.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Party political offices
Preceded by
Fred Meyer
Chairman of the Republican Party of Texas
1994–1997
Succeeded by
Susan Weddington

pauken, thomas, weir, pauken, born, january, 1944, american, politician, member, republican, party, member, texas, workforce, commission, employersin, office, march, 2008, march, 2013governorrick, perrypreceded, byron, lehmansucceeded, byesperanza, andradechai. Thomas Weir Pauken born January 11 1944 is an American politician and member of the Republican Party Tom PaukenMember of the Texas Workforce Commission for EmployersIn office March 1 2008 March 1 2013GovernorRick PerryPreceded byRon LehmanSucceeded byEsperanza AndradeChair of the Texas Workforce CommissionIn office March 1 2008 May 1 2012GovernorRick PerryPreceded byDiane RathSucceeded byAndres AlcantarChairman of the Republican Party of TexasIn office 1994 1997Preceded byFred MeyerSucceeded bySusan WeddingtonPersonal detailsBornThomas Weir Pauken 1944 01 11 January 11 1944 age 80 Victoria Texas U S Political partyRepublican 1965 present SpouseIda AyalaChildren7Alma materGeorgetown UniversitySouthern Methodist UniversityWebsiteOfficial websiteMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited States of AmericaBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service1967 1970Battles warsVietnam WarPauken is a former member and chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission A former long term resident of Dallas who now resides in the resort community of Port Aransas in Nueces County on the Texas Gulf Coast 1 Pauken is a businessman lawyer and the author of two books He served as chairman of the Texas Republican Party from 1994 to 1997 during the transition period when the party leaped quickly from minority to majority status at the statewide level A staunch conservative Pauken also served on President Ronald W Reagan s White House staff On August 21 2006 Governor Rick Perry named Pauken to chairman the Texas Task Force on Appraisal Reform TFAR to study and make recommendations on how to address Texans continuing concerns over property appraisals 2 In March 2008 Perry appointed Pauken chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission TWC 3 which administers state unemployment compensation benefits provides workforce development services and maintains and issues state labor market data During his time as TWC chairman which ended in May 2012 Pauken oversaw the development of the Texas Back to Work program and the Texas Veterans Leadership Program TVLP 4 He was a candidate for governor in 2014 but withdrew early in the contest and supported Greg Abbott the state attorney general and the party nominee in the November 4 general election 5 Contents 1 Education and personal life 2 Georgetown University College Republicans Vietnam 3 Reagan White House 4 Chairmanship of the Texas GOP 5 Chairmanship of Texas Workforce Commission 6 Political campaigns 7 As book author 8 As political commentator 9 On property taxation 10 On education reform 11 2014 gubernatorial campaign 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEducation and personal life editPauken was born on January 11 1944 in Victoria Texas A graduate of the Jesuit High School in Dallas Pauken attended Georgetown University in Washington D C from which he received his Bachelor of Arts in political science in 1965 From 1967 to 1970 he served in the United States Army with a tour of duty in Vietnam He obtained his Juris Doctor degree from Southern Methodist University in Dallas in 1973 Pauken is married to Ida Ayala and the couple has seven children Thomas Michelle Angela Elizabeth Daniel Monica and Victoria The Paukens are Roman Catholic Georgetown University College Republicans Vietnam editPauken entered Georgetown University in 1961 and became involved in politics as a foot soldier in a small but growing conservative army that was known for their support of the U S Senator Barry M Goldwater 6 Pauken was elected national chairman of College Republicans and served from 1965 to 1967 The issue of the Vietnam War dominated his time as chairman Pauken organized the bipartisan National Student Committee for the Defense of Vietnam The group collected more than half a million signatures from students across the nation for a petition expressing support for American soldiers in Vietnam that was presented to Vice President Hubert H Humphrey 7 Upon completion of his term as the chairman of College Republicans Pauken enlisted in the Army because I knew I would be nothing but a hypocrite if I ducked my own obligation to serve 8 Pauken served as a military intelligence officer in Vietnam and returned to America at the end of December 1969 9 10 Reagan White House editPauken was asked to serve on President Reagan s transition team after the 1980 election On February 3 1981 Pauken was nominated by Reagan to serve as director of the ACTION agency now known as AmeriCorps 11 Under Pauken s leadership the staff at ACTION was reduced from 1 000 to 500 and the budget was reduced 25 from 160 million to 120 million 12 Pauken also ended ACTION s funding of liberal organizations many of whom had ties to Saul Alinsky 9 12 During his tenure at ACTION Pauken established the Vietnam Veterans Leadership Program an organization created for Vietnam Veterans and led by Vietnam Veterans who were committed to helping our fellow veterans who were unemployed underemployed or who had lingering problems associated with their Vietnam experience 7 At ACTION Pauken oversaw the implementation of the Just Say No to Drugs program in which Nancy Reagan served as chief spokeswoman He was awarded the Ronald Reagan Medal of Honor by Reagan administration alumni In 1985 Pauken left the Reagan administration to return to Texas to enter private business He joined a Dallas based venture capital company in 1986 13 Chairmanship of the Texas GOP editIn 1994 Pauken was elected chairman of his state party organization with strong support from Reagan conservatives and social conservatives disenchanted with the so called stand patism and moderation of the outgoing chairman Fred Meyer an ally of former President George H W Bush Pauken won the chairmanship by defeating a last minute challenge waged by still serving U S Representative Joe Barton of Ennis whose district at the time stretched from the Dallas southern suburbs to Bryan College Station During Pauken s tenure as chairman the Republican Party gained majority status in Texas and he was re elected chairman in 1996 He chaired the Texas delegation to the Republican National Convention in 1996 14 The party continued to experience divisions between its establishment faction and its conservative wing In 1996 Bill Price a social conservative who had opposed Pauken when he ran for state chairman in 1994 led an effort to deny the naming of U S Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in San Diego California on the grounds that Hutchison is not pro life Pauken supported the selection of Hutchison as a delegate to the national convention and she was elected a delegate at the state convention The issue became divisive at the state convention even though Senator Robert Dole already had secured enough delegates to win the Republican nomination for president Chairmanship of Texas Workforce Commission editPauken served as chairman of Texas Workforce Commission from March 2008 through April 2012 Upon the completion of his tenure as chairman Pauken remained at TWC as the commissioner representing employers During his tenure he established the Texas Veterans Leadership Program TVLP 15 TVLP is led and staffed by veterans of the wars of Iraq and Afghanistan and provides outreach to returning veterans from those wars aimed at helping the veterans to find employment As of March 2012 about eight thousand returning veterans have received assistance from the program Pauken also initiated the creation of the Texas Back to Work program which offers an incentive of up to 2 000 to employers for hiring qualified out of work Texans who lost their job through no fault of their own More than 25 000 workers have obtained jobs through the program which received the Unemployment Insurance Innovation Award for Reemployment in October 2010 16 From the start of his tenure as chairman Pauken has been a vocal advocate of the need to rebuild the American manufacturing industry and to place greater emphasis on the skilled trades especially at the secondary school level Pauken announced his retirement from TWC effective March 1 2013 Political campaigns editIn 1978 Pauken challenged the freshman Democratic Representative Jim Mattox of Dallas for Texas s 5th congressional district seat in the United States House of Representatives a position held by earlier Republicans Bruce Reynolds Alger and Alan Steelman Mattox was assisted in his campaign by visits from President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalyn Smith Carter Pauken offered a conservative alternative in sharp contrast to Mattox The Democrat prevailed with 35 524 votes 50 percent to Pauken s 34 672 49 percent In their rematch in 1980 Pauken lost by 3 044 votes 70 892 51 percent to 67 848 49 percent While Ronald Reagan was a winner in the Fifth District he had no presidential coattails sufficient to lift Pauken to victory After the congressional losses Pauken joined the transition team of President elect Reagan After his tenure at ACTION and his return to Texas Reagan called upon Pauken again on April 22 1987 to become a director of the Inter American Foundation 1 Pauken ran again for the U S House in a special election after Steve Bartlett resigned to run for mayor of Dallas Sam Johnson defeated Pauken with 24 004 votes 52 6 percent to 21 647 47 4 percent In 1998 Pauken lost his bid in the Republican primary for the Attorney General of Texas In 2010 Pauken endorsed Perry for renomination in his successful race against Senator Hutchison and for reelection in the fall campaign against the Democrat Bill White a former mayor of Houston Texas However Pauken remained neutral in Perry s unsuccessful bid for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination 1 As book author editPauken is the author of two books The Thirty Years War The Politics of the Sixties Generation and Bringing American Home How America Lost Her Way and How We Can Find Our Way Back Published in 1995 The Thirty Years War is a memoir in which Pauken explains his involvement in politics beginning in the 1960s The book traces Pauken s early interest in politics as a debater at Jesuit High School in Dallas his time at Georgetown in which he was embroiled in the campus conflicts over the Vietnam War his service in Vietnam and frustration with the execution of the war his work for and ultimate disillusionment with the Richard M Nixon White House and his time in Reagan administration when he was director of ACTION The noted conservative reporter and commentator Robert Novak wrote in a foreword to the book that The Thirty Years War demonstrates how Pauken believes in what he says and performs accordingly 17 Novak concluded by writing that Tom Pauken cherishes and nourishes the dangerous idea that the Republican Party should stand for something He gives every indication that after fighting for 30 years he is just getting his second wind 18 In Bringing America Home 2010 Pauken outlines what he believes to be the causes of America s economic downturn misguided foreign policy and moral decline Like the columnist and former presidential candidate Patrick J Buchanan Pauken places much of the blame on neoconservatives within the Republican Party leadership He outlines a plan for addressing the nation s ills rooted in the Founding Fathers and traditional conservative principles Booklist described the book as a conservative manifesto of the highest caliber humane civilized expressed by an active living conscience 19 Bringing America Home argues that the George W Bush presidential administration squandered the conservative political capital of the Goldwater Reagan years As political commentator editPauken is a frequent political commentator on Texas radio stations and television programs in addition to regular speeches to civic clubs and conventions He is also a guest opinion column contributor to several Texas newspapers and blogs Pauken is a regular contributor to Chronicles a paleoconservative magazine published by the Rockford Institute in Rockford Illinois On property taxation editOn April 26 2006 Pauken endorsed the Texas Tax Reform Commission s plan for property tax relief and business tax reform A portion of his statement follows Those who know me know that I have never been shy about encouraging elected leaders to adhere to the Republican Party s conservative philosophy when dealing with the issue of taxes As former chairman of the Republican Party of Texas a former member of the Reagan administration and a conservative grassroots activist for more than four decades I have been unequivocal in my support for conservative tax reform even if the byproduct is a few ruffled feathers There is no doubt that if this plan flouted conservative principles I would be among the first to publicly call for its defeat Instead I am urging lawmakers to adopt this plan as soon as possible because it would be a tremendous victory for Texas homeowners and taxpayers At the same time this legislation encourages job creation and economic growth particularly in the manufacturing sector 20 The proposal was adopted near the close of the special session of the Texas Legislature which met a June 1 2006 deadline set by the Texas Supreme Court in regard to school funding On education reform editIn mid 2012 Pauken emerged as a leading opponent of Texas current model of mandatory testing and college preparation Pauken contended a system of test learning de emphasizes a more wholistic educational approach and leads to a higher number of dropouts He proposed a multi pathway system by which high school students can learn career centric math and science skills while earning certifications and licenses in their preferred fields Each pathway would lead to the same diploma and college preparation would still be an emphasis for students who wish to pursue higher education 2 Several of these reforms appeared in the Pauken supported Texas House Bill 5 which became law in June 2013 Pauken said in an op ed appearing in the Texas Tribune For those on the career path certification or licensure in their fields is the best way to show whether or not their education was successful And for those going to a university there is no reason we can t use the same tests that universities use in determining admission like the SAT or ACT Performance measures ought to be tied to the actual outcomes that we seek for our students 3 2014 gubernatorial campaign editPauken announced his gubernatorial candidacy on March 21 2013 4 His decision to seek the governorship he indicated is not predicated on what other candidates may also enter the field meaning Governor Perry a potential candidate for reelection to a fourth full term and Attorney General Greg Abbott now in his third term in that position Pauken said that he wants to end crony capitalism and repair long term problems of public education We just need a different style of leadership and a different approach to addressing the issues Pauken said 1 He vowed to run a common sense issues campaign not one based on consultant driven sound bites 1 He withdrew from the race on December 5 2013 citing his financial and organizational difficulties and the lack of a realistic path to victory 5 Pauken supports term limits for state officials 1 and opposes the Robin Hood transfer of money from property rich school districts to those with fewer resources He claims that the state should make up the difference in funding between the wealthier and the poorer districts in a revenue neutral fashion by replacing a portion of property taxes with consumption taxes or by expanding the sales tax He supports expanded vocational education greater local control of schools and reduced emphasis on standardized testing 21 Pauken said that when he ran for state GOP chairman in 1994 We didn t have much money and we had political operative Karl Rove against me and U S Senator Phil Gramm the entire establishment against us And we won 21 In 1998 the last time that Pauken sought elected office he finished with 30 percent in a three candidate field for the office of Texas attorney general 22 The winner of the primary runoff election was John Cornyn the state s current senior U S senator and a candidate for reelection to a third term in 2014 Coincidentally the Democrat that Cornyn defeated in the general election held on November 3 1998 was former Attorney General Jim Mattox 23 the same candidate who had defeated Pauken for the Dallas based congressional seat in 1978 and 1980 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Texas portal nbsp Law portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Conservatism portal nbsp Christianity portalList of Chairpersons of the College Republicans Texas Workforce Commission ACTION agencyReferences edit a b c d e Jonathan Tilove Longtime GOP leader Tom Pauken to run for governor statesman com Retrieved March 21 2013 Office of the Governor Rick Perry Press Release Perry Creates Texas Task Force on Appraisal Reform Governor state tx us Archived from the original on 2012 10 24 Retrieved 2012 11 07 Office of the Governor Rick Perry Appointment Gov Perry Names Pauken as Chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission Governor state tx us Archived from the original on 2012 10 24 Retrieved 2012 11 07 Gov Perry Launches Texas Veterans Leadership Program Office of the Governor Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 26 April 2012 Pauken resigned as a TWC Commissioner in March 2013 a b Tom Pauken withdraws from GOP governor s race The Dallas Morning News 5 December 2013 Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2013 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa Illinois Jameson Books Inc p 26 ISBN 0 915463 66 0 a b Pauken Tom Tom Pauken s Address at the 8th Annual Veterans Ball in Bellville TX Saturday November 20 2010 PDF Texas Workforce Commission Archived from the original PDF on April 15 2012 Retrieved 26 April 2012 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p 53 ISBN 0 915463 66 0 a b Tom Pauken Bringing America Home Retrieved 26 April 2012 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p 81 ISBN 0 915463 66 0 Reagan Ronald Nomination of Thomas W Pauken To Be Director of ACTION The American Presidency Project Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p 171 ISBN 0 915463 66 0 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p 194 ISBN 0 915463 66 0 Burka Paul 1996 The year the Republican Party of Texas turned hard right Burka Blog Texas Monthly Archived from the original on February 18 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Pauken Tom Statement from Tom Pauken On the Conclusion of His Tenure as Chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 23 2012 Texas Back to Work Reemployment Program Wins National Award U S Department of Labor National Association of State Workforce Agencies Honors TWC PDF Texas Workforce Commission Archived from the original PDF on February 20 2011 Retrieved 4 June 2012 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p x ISBN 0 915463 66 0 Pauken Thomas 1995 The Thirty Years War Ottawa IL Jameson Books Inc p xiii ISBN 0 915463 66 0 Olson Ray 2010 Booklist ISBN 978 0984370207 Pauken Tom PERRY SHARP PLAN A TAX HIKE OR A TAX CUT Dallasblog com Retrieved 8 May 2012 dead link a b Former Texas GOP chairman Tom Pauken to run for governor March 21 2013 dallasnews com Retrieved March 22 2013 Republican primary returns March 10 1998 elections sos state tx us Archived from the original on January 9 2014 Retrieved March 22 2013 General election returns November 3 1998 elections sos state tx us Archived from the original on January 9 2014 Retrieved March 22 2013 Further reading editWho s Who in America 1999 edition Congressional Quarterly s Guide to U S Elections 5 6 dead link 7 8 9 dead link 10 dead link 11 External links editOfficial website Appearances on C SPANParty political officesPreceded byFred Meyer Chairman of the Republican Party of Texas1994 1997 Succeeded bySusan Weddington Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tom Pauken amp oldid 1186385869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.