Art patron Roger Johnson dead at 70
Barbara Diamond
Political maverick and patron of the arts and education Roger W.
Johnson died Feb. 25 at his Laguna Beach home. He was 70.
Memorial services will be held at 3 p.m., Monday at the University
Synagogue in Irvine.
Mr. Johnson, who quit smoking in 1977, battled lung cancer for
more than two years before succumbing.
He will be remembered as a champion of political reform, a
Republican who defied fellow members of the powerful Lincoln Club to
support a Democrat for president, and for his commitment to the
performing arts and education.
He left the top job at a Fortune 500 company to become top gun of
the General Services Administration from 1993 to 1996 in President
Bill Clinton’s first term in office, and played a key role in the
administration’s effort to “reinvent government.”
A soft-spoken man, Johnson was at ease in the highest circles of
industry, philanthropy and government, as comfortable in his
well-tailored suits and dinner jacket as other men are in jeans and
T-shirts.
Johnson’s dedication to political reform did not wane when he
resigned at head of the GSA.
He and Janice, his wife of 48 years, endowed a chair in social
ecology at UC Irvine, where he was a member of the Board of Trustees
and taught. Last year, he published “It Can Be Fixed: Your Unmanaged
Government,” based on his experiences in Washington D.C.
The book was dedicated to his wife, “my inspiration and my partner
in all things for 48 years.”
In an interview with the Coastline Pilot in September, Johnson
opined that nothing was wrong with the federal government that
couldn’t be fixed by best management practices.
“The reason most government operations are screwed up is not
because politicians are lazy or crooked; it’s because they don’t know
how to manage,” he said.
“Washington insiders are smart and they think they know how to
manage, but they don’t and they won’t like this book.”
But then, the bureaucrats hadn’t much liked his attempts, with
some success, to streamline the government’s lackadaisical practices
at GSA.
They reacted with hostility, personal attacks and allegations of
improprieties, from all of which he was cleared a year after he left
government service.
Mr. Johnson did not advocate running the government like a
business. He was the chief executive officer and chairman of Western
Digital in Irvine when he was asked by Clinton to give up the job to
go to Washington.
The relationship between Democrat Clinton and Republican Johnson
began in 1991 when Johnson was quoted in a newspaper article saying
he was so distressed by then-President George H.W. Bush’s economic
policies that he would consider voting for a qualified Democrat. The
ink was barely dry when Clinton called.
A year later, he cosponsored a Clinton visit to predominantly
Republican Orange County and declared his support for the Democratic
candidate.
Mr. Johnson, who had been a registered Republican, since the first
time he paid taxes, kept his party affiliation while in Washington,
but switched to campaign for Clinton’s second term. The Johnsons also
hosted a traffic-stopping fund-raiser at their oceanfront home for
Hilary Clinton’s run for the U.S. Senate.
“I will remain a Democrat as long as the present administration is
in office,” Johnson said in September.
He was no stranger to the Democratic Party, even before his stint
in the nation’s capitol. His father was a union president in
Hartford, Conn., where he was born June 24, 1934.
Mr. Johnson and Janice married in August 1956. They lived in
Schenectady, N.Y. where she taught music and he began his climb up
the corporate ladder, employed by GE and later Memorex.
They moved to Orange County in 1982, when he was named to head
Western Digital, a company he is credited with turning around until
the economy stalled in the early 1990s, which prompted him to forgo
his $1-million salary.
The Johnsons became prominent supporters of the arts. He served on
the executive board of the Center for Performing Arts, while his wife
chaired the guilds. He resigned from the board when the rules forbade
married couples to serve on the board. Janice shifted to the Pacific
Symphony Orchestra board, on which she still serves.
Mr. Johnson is also survived by the Johnson’s three children:
daughter Marek Johnson Cantor and sons Eric and Daniel.
In lieu of flowers the family requests donations be made to the
Johnson Share for Governments at UC Irvine.
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