John Sharp (Texas politician)

For other people named John Sharp, see John Sharp (disambiguation).
John Sharp

Sharp on December 19, 2008.
14th Chancellor of the Texas A&M University System
Assumed office
August 15, 2011
Preceded by Michael D. McKinney
35th Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
In office
January 20, 1991  January 20, 1999
Governor Ann Richards (1991–1995)
George W. Bush (1995–1999)
Preceded by Bob Bullock
Succeeded by Carole Keeton Strayhorn
Member of the Texas Railroad Commission
In office
1987–1991
Governor William Perry "Bill" Clements, Jr.
Preceded by Clark Jobe
Succeeded by Lena Guerrero
Member of the Texas Senate from the 18th District
In office
November 20, 1982  January 13, 1987
Preceded by John T. Wilson
Succeeded by Ken Armbrister
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 40th district
In office
January 9, 1979  November 20, 1982
Preceded by Joe Wyatt, Jr.
Succeeded by Alex Moreno
Personal details
Born John Spencer Sharp
July 28, 1950
Placedo, Victoria County
Texas, USA
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Charlotte Sharp (married since 1978)
Children

Spencer Sharp

Victoria Sharp
Residence Austin, Texas
Religion Roman Catholic
Military service
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1972–1976
Rank Second Lieutenant
Battles/wars Vietnam War

John Spencer Sharp is a Democratic politician from Texas, who has served since 2011 as the chancellor of the Texas A&M University System. From 1991 to 1999, he was the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. From 1979 to 1987, he was a member of both houses of the Texas State Legislature. From 1987 to 1991, he was one of the three members of the Texas Railroad Commission. In 1998 and 2002, he was the Democratic Party's nomination for lieutenant governor.

Sharp is also a principal in the Austin office of the Dallas-based Ryan & Company, a tax consulting firm. In 2005, he was appointed to serve as chairman of the Texas Tax Reform Commission. In December 2008, Sharp announced that he would run in 2012 for the United States Senate seat currently held by the retiring Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison. However, Sharp never sought the position, having instead been named the Texas A&M System chancellor.

Background

The son of an oil field worker and a school teacher, Sharp grew up in the small farming community of Placedo in Victoria County[1] along the Texas Gulf Coast. In 1972, Sharp earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Texas A&M University in College Station, where he was a member of the Corps of Cadets and was elected Student Body President. Upon graduation, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Reserves. He belongs to American Legion Post 76 in Austin.

In 1976, Sharp received a master's degree in Public Administration from Texas State University (formerly named Southwest Texas State University) in San Marcos while working full-time in Austin with the Legislative Budget Board.[2] In 1978, Sharp returned to Victoria, Texas, where he opened a one-man real estate firm and became a successful small business owner. That same year, he married Charlotte Sharp. The couple has a son, Spencer, and a daughter, Victoria. The Sharps are involved in many community and humanitarian efforts, including airlifts of Jewish families to Israel from Ukraine and other areas of Russia.

In 1978, Sharp was elected to the Texas House of Representatives from the 40th District in Victoria and was later named "Outstanding Freshman" by Texas Monthly. Just a few weeks after his re-election for a third full two-year term in the general election of 1982, he ran and won a special election runoff and served a full four-year term in the Texas Senate. He was appointed to the powerful Senate Finance Committee. In 1986, he was elected to the Texas Railroad Commission. In that position, he worked to reform the state's trucking regulations, improve railroad safety, and develop new markets for Texas' abundant supply of clean-burning and efficient natural gas.

Sharp has received numerous awards, including the only "Texas Quality Award"[3] ever presented to a governmental agency. Texas State University presented Sharp with the "Distinguished Alumnus Award" in 1996, where he also taught a course on Texas state government for several semesters in the early 2000s.[4] On August 9, 2012, Sharp was selected as "Mr. South Texas" for 2013 by the Washington's Birthday Celebration in Laredo. In conferring the honor, the birthday association cited Sharp's long record of public service to his state.[5]

Texas politics

In 1990, Sharp was elected as the 35th State Comptroller of Public Accounts for the State of Texas. He was re-elected in 1994. In 1998, he did not seek a third term as comptroller but instead lost the race for lieutenant governor to Rick Perry, 50-48 percent. Sharp ran for lieutenant governor again in 2002, but was defeated by then Land Commissioner David Dewhurst, 52-46 percent.

Upon taking office as Comptroller, he began working to fulfill his pledge to "make government work more like our most successful businesses." During his eight years as Comptroller, Sharp established the Texas Performance Review (TPR), an ongoing audit on state government. During Sharp's two 4-year terms as Comptroller, the TPR identified more than $8.5 billion in taxpayer savings and changed the way government does business through such innovations as the Council on Competitive Government.[6] Other innovative programs created and implemented by Sharp during these eight years include:

As Comptroller, Sharp also commanded the most successful state lottery start-up in U.S. history. With only 189 employees (compared to California's 1,000 and Florida's 750), Sharp's team put their first tickets on sale seven weeks early and set first-day, first-week, and first-year world sales records. By the time he turned the games over to the new Texas Lottery Commission,[9] the state was $1 billion richer – and Sharp had returned $81 million in unspent administrative funds. Sharp's blueprint for the Texas Lottery was later used by several American states as well as Mexico.

In 2005, Sharp was asked to head an education task force – called the Texas Tax Reform Commission – charged with preparing a bi-partisan education plan for the state. The special session convened on April 17, 2006. Sharp accepted the offer and removed himself as a potential candidate for governor in 2006. The task force issued its final plan several months later, and the legislature adopted it.[10] For his successful efforts, Sharp was later nominated by the Dallas Morning News for "Texan of the Year".[11]

Texas Proposition 15

In 2007, Sharp helped spearhead Texas Proposition 15,[12] a proposed amendment to the Texas Constitution that sought to establish grants for cancer research, grants for cancer prevention and control programs in Texas to mitigate the incidence of cancer, and the purchase of laboratory facilities. Sharp acted as Treasurer for the supporting political action committee, Texans to Cure Cancer. Proposition 15 passed both houses of the Texas Legislature in May 2007 and was approved by the voters in November 2007 by a wide margin.

Senate campaign

On December 4, 2008, Republican U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison announced the creation of an exploratory committee for the Texas governor's race in 2010. Had she won the governorship, Hutchison would have been required to vacate her Senate seat by January 2011. If she were to stay in the Senate and not run for governor, she would have been up for re-election to the Senate in 2012. On December 8, 2008, Sharp became the first Democrat to announce his intention to run for this Senate seat, regardless of Hutchison's decision. Unlike several other candidates for the office, Sharp did not create an exploratory committee but immediately began raising funds and campaigning in 2009.[13]

On March 2, 2010, Hutchison lost the Republican gubernatorial nomination to incumbent Rick Perry, who subsequently won his third consecutive four-year term in the position. On January 7, 2011, Hutchison announced her retirement from the Senate, effective January 3, 2013. Because Sharp accepted the TAMU chancellor's position in 2011, he never ran for the Senate. The Democrats instead nominated former State Representative Paul Sadler, an attorney from Henderson, to contest the Hutchison seat. In a runoff election, the Republicans chose conservative lawyer Ted Cruz over Sharp's former interparty rival, Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst. Cruz then handily defeated Sadler in the November 6 general election. Had Sharp and Dewhurst been their respective party nominees, Texans would have seen a rematch between the two exactly ten years after Dewhurst defeated Sharp for lieutenant governor.

The Texas A&M University System

On August 15, 2011, John Sharp was chosen as chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, the second largest system of higher education in Texas, with a statewide network of 11 universities, seven state agencies, two service units and a comprehensive health science center.

A&M System members educate more than 131,000 students and reach another 22 million people through service each year. With more than 28,000 faculty and staff, the A&M System has a physical presence in 250 of the state’s 254 counties and a programmatic presence in every one. In 2012, externally funded research expenditures exceeded $783 million to help drive the state’s economy.

Leadership

As chancellor of The Texas A&M University System, Sharp has led multiple initiatives to improve efficiency, expand the presence of the A&M System, and serve the needs of the state of Texas.

Some of these initiatives are detailed below:

For more information on John Sharp as chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, visit his personal webpage at http://chancellor.tamus.edu/

External links

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Bob Bullock
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
1991–1999
Succeeded by
Carole Keeton Strayhorn
Party political offices
Preceded by
Bob Bullock
Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Texas
1998, 2002
Succeeded by
Maria Luisa Alvarado
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.