Ex-high tech CEOs Carly Fiorina and Meg Whitman, running primarily
on their records at Hewlett-Packard and eBay, respectively, are a step
closer to statewide office after winning GOP nominations in California
June 8.
Fiorina, who received endorsements from the likes of
former Intel CEO Craig Barrett and ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin but was
rejected by many in the HP family, outdistanced her competition, former
U.S. Rep. Tom Campbell and state Assemblyman Chuck DeVore. Now she will
look to knock three-term Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer from her seat in
a political climate that has not been kind to incumbents.
Likewise, Whitman outpaced Steve Poizner for the
GOP’s gubernatorial nomination, and will run against state Attorney
General Jerry Brown, the former governor who won the Democratic primary.
In her speech after the primary win, Whitman gave a nod to Fiorina and her victory.
"Career politicians in Sacramento and Washington be
warned," Whitman said. "You now face your worst nightmare: two
businesswomen from the real world who know how to create jobs, balance
budgets and get things done."
Both Whitman and Fiorina—neither of whom have strong
political backgrounds, and faced criticism for histories of not voting
in elections—ran on the strength of their business records, and the
millions of dollars each earned from them.
Whitman reportedly spent $71 million of her own money
in their campaign, and has pledged to spend $150 million to with the
gubernatorial seat. Fiorina reportedly spent $5 million of personal
money in her primary campaign.
Fiorina garnered 56 percent of the vote,
outdistancing Campbell’s 22 percent and DeVore’s 19 percent. Whitman
collected 64 percent of the votes, while Poizner received 27 percent.
Now the two have to take their shots in the general
elections, where they will have to veer back toward the center after
having courted the far right during the primary campaigns. They’ll also
face an electorate that not only is teeming with anti-incumbent
sentiment but also has shown anger toward big corporations.
Throughout the campaign, Fiorina—who spent several
months in 2008 as an adviser to the presidential campaign of Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., has touted her six years running HP. While she looks
to make that record an asset, Boxer will try to use it against her.
Fiorina did run HP, but with mixed results, and the
success of her largest endeavor—having HP buy rival Compaq Computer—is
still being debated. She eventually was forced by the board of
directors to resign after the stock steadily fell during her tenure.
She collected a $21 million severance package.
Still, she received the backing of ex-Intel CEO
Barrett, who called the HP-Compaq merger “an unqualified success” that
set HP up for its current string of success. She also was endorsed by Palin.
However, Fiorina got opposition from some in the HP
camp. In a letter to several U.S. senators, HP heir Arianna Packard
called Fiorina’s tenure at HP “a disaster.”
“I know a little about Carly Fiorina, having watched
her almost destroy the company my grandfather founded,” Packard said in
the letter.
Around the same time, it was reported that HP’s political action committee had given $10,000 to Boxer’s campaign.
And Boxer also will focus on Fiorina’s career. During
Tuesday’s primaries, Boxer said she has proudly dedicated her life to
public service. In contrast, she told reporters, Fiorina "chose to
become a CEO, lay off 30,000 workers, ship jobs overseas, have two
yachts and do all those things. And take a $21 million severance pay."
Fiorina took her own shots at Boxer.
"This fall, she will have to answer to the people of
California for her failure to stand up for our state," she said in a
statement June 8. "Together, we will replace Boxer, take Washington
back, make it listen and make it work."
Both Fiorina and Whitman represent a new look for California’s Republican party.
"There's no question that having two dynamic,
articulate women at the top of the Republican ticket is a tremendous
advantage from previous GOP tickets," Republican consultant Adam
Mendelsohn told the San Francisco Chronicle.
However, their background in business may work
against them thanks to outrage of what many voters see as corporate
misdeeds, according to political scientist Barbara O'Connor, who said
there is voter outrage at corporate malfeasance. She told the Chronicle
that Democrats will try to tag the two wealthy ex-CEOs as "the Goldman
Sachs twins."