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Revision as of 20:03, 27 September 2015
Carly Fiorina | |
---|---|
Born | Cara Carleton Sneed September 6, 1954 |
Alma mater | Stanford University (B.A.) University of Maryland (MBA) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.S.) |
Occupation(s) | Politician (U.S. Senate candidate from California, 2010; U.S. Presidential candidate, 2015-present) Hewlett-Packard, CEO (1999-2005) Lucent Technologies, President (consumer products sector, 1996-1999) AT&T, Senior vice-president (hardware and systems, 1990); Head chair (North American operations, 1995) Fox Business Network, Commentator (2007-?) One Woman Initiative (OWI), Fund chair (2013-2015) |
Political party | Republican[1] |
Board member of | Good360 (chair, 2012-present) World Economic Forum (2005) Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (2006-2009) James Madison University (Board of Visitors, 2012-2015) Opportunity International (chairwoman of the global board)[2] |
Spouse(s) | Todd Bartlem (1977–1984) Frank Fiorina (1985–present) |
Children | 2 step-daughters: Traci and Lori Ann (d. 2009) |
Parent(s) | Joseph Tyree Sneed, III and Madelon Montross (née Juergens) |
Awards | America's Most Powerful People, Forbes;[3] Most Powerful Woman in American Business, Fortune (1999);[3] Honorary Fellow, London Business School (2001);[3][4] Top 25 Executives, CRN (2002);[3] Appeal of Conscience Award (2002);[3][4] Seeds of Hope Award, Concern International (2003);[3][4] Leadership Award, Private Sector Council (2004);[3][4] Alliance Medal of Honor, Electronics Industries (2004)[3][5] |
Website | carlyfiorina |
Signature | |
Carly Fiorina (born Cara Carleton Sneed, September 6, 1954) is an American Republican politician and former business executive who currently chairs the non-profit philanthropic organization Good360.[8][9]
In 1980, Fiorina started at AT&T and its equipment and technology spin-off, Lucent Technologies, and rose through the ranks to become an executive. As chief executive officer of Hewlett-Packard (HP) from 1999 to 2005, she was the first woman to lead a top-20 company as ranked by Fortune magazine.[10]
In 2002, Fiorina oversaw the biggest high-tech merger in history up to that time, with rival computer company Compaq, which made HP the world's largest personal computer manufacturer.[11][12] During Fiorina's tenure, HP laid off 30,000 U.S. employees. By 2004 the number of HP employees was about the same as the pre-merger total of HP and Compaq combined, and that 2004 number included roughly 8,000 employees of other companies acquired by HP since 2001.[13][14][15] On February 9, 2005, the HP board of directors forced Fiorina to resign as chief executive officer and chair due to declining stock value, disappointing earning reports, disagreements about the company's performance, and her resistance to transferring authority to division heads.[16][17][18]
After leaving HP, Fiorina served on the boards of several organizations.[19] She was an adviser to Republican John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign. She ran for the United States Senate in California in 2010 and won a three-person race for the Republican nomination, but lost the general election to incumbent Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer by 10 percentage points.[20][21]
On May 4, 2015, Fiorina announced her candidacy for the Republican nomination in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[1]
Early life and education
Fiorina was born on September 6, 1954, in Austin, Texas, the daughter of Madelon Montross (née Juergens) and Joseph Tyree Sneed, III.[22] At the time of her birth, Fiorina's father was a professor at the University of Texas School of Law.[23][24][25] He would later become dean of Duke University School of Law, Deputy U.S. Attorney General, and judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.[26] Her mother was an abstract painter.[27] She is mainly of English and German ancestry,[28][29] and was raised Episcopalian.[28]
Fiorina attended Channing School in London. She later attended five different high schools, including one in Ghana,[30] graduating from Charles E. Jordan High School in Durham, North Carolina. At one time she aspired to be a classical pianist.[31] She received a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy and medieval history at Stanford University in 1976. During her summers, she worked as a secretary for Kelly Services.[32] She attended the UCLA School of Law in 1976 but dropped out[33] after one semester and worked as a receptionist for six months at a real estate firm Marcus & Millichap, moving up to a broker position before leaving for Bologna, Italy, where she taught English.[34]
Fiorina received a Master of Business Administration in marketing from the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, College Park in 1980. She obtained a Master of Science in management at the MIT Sloan School of Management under the Sloan Fellows program in 1989.[35]
Business career
AT&T and Lucent
In 1980, at age 25, Fiorina joined AT&T as a management trainee, selling telephone services to big federal agencies.[36] In 1990, at age 35, she became the company's first female officer as senior vice president overseeing the company's hardware and systems division.[37] By age 40, she was heading the North American operations.[37][38]
In 1995, Fiorina led corporate operations for Lucent Technologies, Inc., a spin-off from AT&T of its Western Electric and Bell Labs divisions into a new company.[39] In that capacity, she reported to Lucent chief executive Henry B. Schacht.[40] She played a key role in planning and implementing the 1996 initial public offering of a successful stock and company launch strategy.[37][41][42] The spin-off became one of the most successful IPOs in U.S. history, raising US$3 billion.[36][39]
Later in 1996, Fiorina was appointed president of Lucent's consumer products sector.[41] In 1997, she was named group president for Lucent's US$19 billion global service-provider business, overseeing marketing and sales for the company's largest customer segment.[37][43] That year, Fiorina chaired a US$2.5 billion joint venture between Lucent's consumer communications and Royal Philips Electronics, under the name Philips Consumer Communications (PCC).[44][45] In the edition of October 12, 1998 of Fortune magazine Fiorina was named "The Most Powerful Woman in American Business".[36]
Lucent added 22,000 jobs and revenues grew from US$19 billion to US$38 billion and the company's market share increased in every region for every product.[39][46] According to Fortune magazine, Lucent increased sales by lending money to their own customers, writing that "In a neat bit of accounting magic, money from the loans began to appear on Lucent’s income statement as new revenue while the dicey debt got stashed on its balance sheet as an allegedly solid asset".[46] Lucent's stock price grew 10-fold.[46]
Hewlett-Packard (HP)
Hiring
In July 1999, Hewlett-Packard Company named Fiorina chief executive officer, succeeding Lewis Platt and prevailing over the internal candidate Ann Livermore.[47] Concerning Fiorina's hiring as HP's first woman CEO, Matthew Boyle of Fortune magazine has said that "Carly Fiorina didn't just break the glass ceiling, she obliterated it, as the first woman to lead a FORTUNE 20 company."[48][49][50]
Fortune magazine described the hiring as the result of "a dysfunctional HP board committee, filled with its own poisoned politics, hired her with no CEO experience, nor interviews with the full board."[51] Fiorina received a larger signing offer than any of her predecessors, including: US$65 million in restricted stock to compensate her for the Lucent stock and options she left behind,[46] a US$3 million signing bonus, a US$1 million annual salary (plus a US$1.25–US$3.75 million annual bonus), US$36,000 in mortgage assistance, a relocation allowance, and permission (and encouragement) to use company planes for personal affairs.[52]
Separating Agilent Technologies from HP and proposed PWC acquisition
Although the decision to spin off the company's technical equipment division pre-dated her arrival, one of her first major responsibilities as chief executive was overseeing the separation of the unit into the stand-alone Agilent Technologies.[53] Fiorina proposed the acquisition of the technology services arm of PricewaterhouseCoopers for almost US$14 billion, but withdrew the bid after a lackluster reception from Wall Street.[54] Following the collapse of the dot-com bubble, the PwC consulting arm was acquired by IBM for less than US$4 billion.[55]
Compaq merger
In early September 2001, in the wake of the bursting of the Tech Bubble, Fiorina announced the acquisition of Compaq with US$25 billion in stock,[16] which, at the time, was the second largest producer of personal computers, after Dell.[16] HP stock traded down by 30% on the news of the merger.[16] The Compaq merger[56] created the world's largest personal computer manufacturer by units shipped.[57][58]
Fiorina frequently clashed with HP's board of directors[52][59] and she had to fight with the board for the merger. Fiorina won the proxy battle with 51.4% of the shareholders with the institutional shareholders providing the bulk of the support.[16] Fiorina was supported in the proxy battle by other board members[16] that included Richard Hackborn, Philip M. Condit,[60] George A. Keyworth, II,[61] and Robert Knowling.[16]
The merger was implemented despite strong opposition from board member Walter Hewlett (the son of company co-founder William Hewlett).[59][62] Hewlett originally voted with the other board members to approve the Compaq deal, but he later changed his mind.[16] Hewlett launched a proxy fight against Fiorina's efforts, which failed, receiving 48.6% opposition among HP's shareholders.[63]
Fiorina proceeded to reorganize HP and merge the part she kept with PC maker Compaq.[64]
Business professor Robert Burgelman and former HP executive vice president, Webb McKinney, who led HP's post-merger integration team, analyzed the merger and concluded that it was ultimately successful, and asserted that Fiorina's replacement, Mark Hurd, was able to do what his predecessor hadn't, thus making the merger work in HPs advantage.[65] In 2008, former acting CEO of Compaq and Huffington Post business contributor, Ben Rosen, referred to the merger as "The Merger That Worked". Rosen went on to reference pundits trying to discredit Fiorina as a corporate leader as "shrill", and stated that "...the merger wasn't the problem; it was the management. All Hewlett-Packard needed was strong management in order to realize the latent potential of the merged company."[66] The February 7, 2005 issue of Fortune described her merger plan as "failing" and the prognosis as "doubtful".[67]
Allegations of sales to Iran despite sanctions
In 1997, prior to Fiorina's joining the company, HP's Dutch subsidiary formed a partnership with a company in Dubai, which sold HP's products in Iran.[68] Under Fiorina's leadership at HP, the company sold millions of dollars worth of printers and computer products to Iran through the foreign subsidiary, while U.S. export sanctions were in effect. [69][70] After the story was initially reported by The Boston Globe in 2008,[71] the SEC sent a letter of inquiry to HP, who responded that products worth US$120 million were sold in fiscal 2008[72] arguing that the sales did not violate export sanctions because they were made through a foreign subsidiary.[68] According to former officials who worked on sanctions, HP was using a loophole by routing their sales through a foreign subsidiary.[68] HP ended its relationship with Redington Gulf after the SEC inquiry.[68]
Changes to HP culture
Fiorina's predecessor at HP had pushed for an outsider to replace him because he believed that the company had become complacent and that consensus-driven decision making was inhibiting the company's growth. Fiorina instituted three major changes shortly after her arrival: replacing profit sharing with bonuses awarded if the company met financial expectations, a reduction in operating units from 83 to 12, and consolidating back-office functions.[16] To many inside the company, the changes were extreme and in contradiction to the HP Way.[16]
Fiorina faced a backlash among HP employees and the tech community for her leading role in the demise of HP's egalitarian "The HP Way" work culture and guiding philosophy,[52][59][73] which she felt hindered innovation.[52][74] Because of changes to HP's culture, and requests for voluntary pay cuts to prevent layoffs (subsequently followed by the largest layoffs in HP's history), employee satisfaction surveys at HP—previously among the highest in America—revealed "widespread unhappiness" and distrust,[52][75] and Fiorina was sometimes booed at company meetings and attacked on HP's electronic bulletin board.[52]
According to The Fiscal Times, Fiorina and others have argued that she "laid the groundwork for some of HP’s progress under her successors", and that she shook the culture at HP so that it could compete in the Internet Age.[76]
Layoffs
In January 2001, HP laid off 1,700 marketing employees.[77] In June 2001, Fiorina asked employees to either take pay cuts or use their allotted vacation time to cut additional costs, resulting in more than 80,000 people signing up and saving HP US$130 million.[78] Despite these efforts from employees, in July Fiorina announced that 6,000 jobs would be cut, the biggest reduction in the company's 64-year history,[79][80] but those cuts would not actually occur until after the Compaq merger was announced.[81] In September 2001, Fiorina said she intended to cut an additional 15,000 jobs in the event of a merger with Compaq.[79][82]
In all, Fiorina laid off 30,000 U.S. employees.[13][14] According to Politifact, those 30,000 layoffs were "as a result of the merger with Compaq...."[14] By 2004 the number of HP employees was about the same as the pre-merger total of HP and Compaq combined, and that 2004 number included roughly 8,000 employees of other companies acquired by HP since 2001.[14][83][84] Altogether, under Fiorina's leadership, HP hired more people than it fired, including employees in countries outside the United States.[15]
In 1999, when Fiorina became CEO of HP, the company had 84,800 employees.[84] After the merger with Compaq, the company had a total of 145,000 employees worldwide.[85] At the time of her resignation in 2005, after HP had acquired several other companies, HP had about 150,000 employees.[14]
Forced resignation
HP's revenue doubled due to mergers with Compaq and other companies,[86][87] and the rate of patent filings increased.[87] According to reports, the company underperformed by a number of metrics: there were no gains in HP's net income despite a 70% gain in net income of the S&P 500 over this period;[86] the company's debt rose from US$4.25 billion to US$6.75 billion;[86] and its stock price fell by 50%, exceeding declines in the S&P 500 Information Technology Sector index and the NASDAQ.[86][88] In contrast, stock prices for IBM and Dell respectively fell 27.5% and 3% during this time.[88] The Compaq acquisition, was not as transformative as Fiorina and the board envisioned; in the merger proxy, they forecasted that the PC division of the merged entities would generate an operating margin of 3.0% in 2003, while the actual figure was 0.1% in that year and 0.9% in 2004.[16] During Fiorina's stint as CEO, HP's cash flow increased by 40%, to around $6.8 million.[89][90]
In 2004, HP fell dramatically short of its predicted third-quarter earnings, and Fiorina fired three executives during a 5 AM telephone call.[52] In early January 2005, the Hewlett-Packard board of directors discussed with Fiorina a list of issues that the board had regarding the company's performance and disappointing earning reports.[16][17][18] The board proposed a plan to shift her authority to HP division heads, which Fiorina resisted strongly.[18] A week after the meeting, the confidential plan was leaked to the Wall Street Journal.[91] Less than a month later, the board brought back Tom Perkins and forced Fiorina to resign as chair and chief executive officer of the company.[92]
The company's stock jumped on news of her departure, adding almost three billion dollars to the value of HP in a single day.[93][94]
In her book Tough Choices, she referred to board members' behavior as "amateurish and immature".[95] Larry Sonsini, who investigated the leak related to Fiorina's forced resignation, described the board in his report to Fiorina as being "dysfunctional."[95]
Under the company's agreement with Fiorina, which was characterized as a golden parachute by Time magazine,[96] and Yahoo! Finance,[97] Fiorina received a severance package valued at US$21 million, which consisted of 2.5 times her annual salary plus bonus and the balance from accelerated vesting of stock options.[16][98] In 2008, Loren Steffy of The Houston Chronicle suggested that the EDS acquisition after Fiorina's tenure was evidence that her failed plan to acquire part of Pricewaterhouse Coopers was justified.[99] According to Fortune magazine, Fiorina collected over US$100 million in compensation during her short tenure at HP.[51]
Business leadership image
In 2003 Fiorina was named by Fortune Magazine the most powerful woman in business, a position she held for five years.[16][100][101] In 2004, Fiorina was included in the Time 100 ranking of "most influential people in the world today"[102] and named tenth on the Forbes list of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women.[103] In 2005, the Wall Street Journal described Fiorina as the epitome of "an alluring, controversial new breed of chief executive officers who combine grand visions with charismatic but self-centered and demanding styles".[104]
Following her resignation from HP, some commentators ranked Fiorina as one of the worst American (or tech) CEOs of all time.[105][106][107] In 2008, InfoWorld grouped her with a list of products and ideas that flopped, declaring that her tenure as CEO of HP was the sixth worst tech flop of all-time, and characterizing her as the "anti-Steve Jobs" for reversing the goodwill of American engineers and alienating existing customers.[108][109] A Stanford Graduate School of Business paper noted Fiorina's request to purchase a US$30 million Gulfstream IV for her use, while her predecessor had traveled coach.[16][79] In August 2015, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld of Yale School of Management said that problems with Fiorina's leadership style were what caused HP to lose half its value during her tenure. He credited later CEO Meg Whitman with restoring HP's business performance.[51]
Others have defended her business leadership decisions and viewed the Compaq merger as successful over the long term.[99][110][111][112] In 2005, Wharton School of Business professor Michael Useem opined, "Fiorina scored high on leadership style, but she failed to execute strategy".[113]
Transition of career and public persona
Autobiography
In October 2006, Fiorina published an autobiography entitled Tough Choices, about her career and her views on issues, what constitutes a leader, how women can thrive in business, and the role technology will continue to play in reshaping the world. A review by NPR Books noted that "The book covers Fiorina's rise and fall as America's most powerful female executive."[114]
Earlier books by others about Fiorina's role in the merger at HP included: Backfire, (2003)[115] by Peter Burrows, and Perfect Enough: Carly Fiorina and the Reinvention of Hewlett-Packard, (2003),[116] by George Anders. A 2003 review by The New York Times of these books said, "Two new books about the deal and its main champion—Hewlett-Packard's chair and chief executive officer, Carly Fiorina—show that there is much investors can glean immediately from this merger."[117]
Other organizational involvement
On October 2007, Fiorina signed with the Fox Business Network as a business commentator.[118]
After resigning from HP, Fiorina served in the board of Revolution Health Group[119] and computer security company Cybertrust in 2005.[120] In 2006, she became a member of the board of directors for chip maker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC),[121] but resigned from that board on November 30, 2009, with the company saying this was "because she planned to devote her full time and energy" to her Senate campaign.[122] She had attended 17% of the TSMC directors' meetings in 2009 and 20% of TSMC directors' meetings in 2008.[123][124] She served as a member of the MIT Corporation[125][126] from 2004 to 2012. She was a member of the Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in 2005.[17][127][128] She is an Honorary Fellow of the London Business School.[129] In July 2012, Governor Bob McDonnell of Virginia appointed her to the James Madison University Board of Visitors.[130][131]
Fiorina is the chair and CEO of Carly Fiorina Enterprises, a business and charitable foundation.[132] A spokesperson described Fiorina Enterprises as "...a nonprofit enterprise that helped Fiorina structure speaking engagements and appearances while providing the public with information about her activities..."[133] The San Francisco Chronicle reported that, as of July 2009, she had "never registered her Carly Fiorina Enterprises to conduct business in California, either with the California secretary of state or the clerk of Santa Clara County, where Fiorina lives."[133]
Philanthropy and nonprofit work
Good360
In April 2012, Fiorina became chair of Good360, a 501(c)(3) nonpartisan nonprofit organization in Alexandria, Virginia, which helps companies donate excess merchandise to charities.[8] Good360 has been consistently ranked by Forbes Magazine as one of the top 10 most efficient charities,[134] and ranked as the 33rd largest charity in the United States.[135] Fiorina has stated that Good360 is "the largest product donation marketplace in the world. We help companies take excess inventory and then distribute that excess inventory to 37,000 vetted charities around this country."[136] In September 2014, Fiorina led an effort by Good360 to get American corporations "to help combat the Ebola virus in West Africa - by donating specific items."[137] As of August 2015, she continues to hold this position.[138]
The One Woman Initiative
Fiorina served as Fund Chair of One Woman Initiative (OWI), a partnership between the private sector and government agencies including the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United States Department of State (DoS).[139][140] OWI describes itself as "An International Women's Empowerment Fund" that seeks to "support existing initiatives in Muslim majority countries and countries with large Muslim populations" and "focus on key empowerment issues including entrepreneurship, political leadership, and the rule of law."[141] OWI said it would raise funds in order to give grants to achieve these objectives, with contributions managed through a separate section 501(c)(3) designated organization.[141]
In June 2009, USAID announced that OWI grants totaling over US$500,000 had been made to grassroots organizations in Azerbaijan, Egypt, India, Pakistan and the Philippines.[142]
Opportunity International
On February 14, 2013, Opportunity International announced a partnership with Fiorina and OWI to provide financial resources, education and training to two million women living in poverty.[143] Fiorina was referred to as Global Ambassador to Opportunity International.[143] On May 4, 2015, Opportunity International announced that Fiorina was resigning from the Board after the announcement of her presidential candidacy.[144]
Fiorina Foundation
Fiorina is the chair and CEO of the Fiorina Foundation, a charity that has donated to causes including Care-a-Van for Kids, a transportation program to aid seriously ill children, and the African Leadership Academy, an educational institution in South Africa.[133] The foundation 'enables corporations, spokeswomen entrepreneurs and philanthropists alike to address some of the world's most challenging issues,' according to Fiorina's Web site, carlyfiorina.com." [133]
The San Francisco Chronicle reported that "Records also show that her Fiorina Foundation has never registered with the Internal Revenue Service or the state attorney general's charitable trust division, which tax-exempt charities are required to do. A spokeswoman commented that "Fiorina and her staff believed the foundation was not required to file with the IRS because it accepted no outside contributions and donated only her personal wealth to worthy causes."[133]
Political career
Fiorina has never held public office,[145][146][147] but said that her status as an outsider is a positive, given that in her opinion, professional politicians have failed to deliver to the American people,[145] stating in an interview with Fox News in 2015 that "82% of the American people now think we need people from outside the professional political class to serve in public office."[148]
Republican National Committee fundraising chair and 2008 campaign
In 2006, Fiorina worked for Republican Senator John McCain's presidential campaign. In early 2008, she was referred to in media sources as a potential vice presidential candidate,[149][150] and The New York Times noted that while she did not want to run, she was an executive who could possibly become a candidate for president.[151] On March 7, 2008, Fiorina was named fundraising chair for the Republican National Committee's "Victory" initiative. She was a "point person" for the McCain campaign on issues related to business and economic affairs.[152] Fiorina's severance package from Hewlett-Packard in 2005 was viewed by some as a political liability during the campaign.[153][154][155]
On September 3, 2008, Fiorina addressed the Republican National Convention. Earlier that day, she defended the selection of Sarah Palin as McCain's running mate and said that Palin was being subjected to sexist attacks, a charge she repeated a few days later in response to one of the Saturday Night Live parodies of Sarah Palin.[156][157][158]
When asked during a radio interview on September 15, 2008 whether she thought Palin had the experience to run a major company like Hewlett-Packard, Fiorina answered "No, I don't. But that's not what she's running for. Running a corporation is a different set of things." When questioned about her answer, she answered, "I don't think John McCain could run a major corporation." Fiorina further claimed that none of the candidates on either ticket had the experience to run a major corporation.[159][160][161] After media coverage of Fiorina's comments, she "disappeared from public view" and planned television appearances were cancelled,[162] although she continued to chair the party's fundraising committee.[152][161][163][164][165]
Referring to the McCain campaign, Newsweek described Fiorina as "the most prominent surrogate on economics issues in any of the major campaigns."[166] Political analyst Stuart Rothenberg pointed out Fiorina's downside, as a vice president running mate for McCain, "is rather easy to sketch out" because Fiorina would "become a talking point for Democrats" who would focus on Fiorina's severance package and her management style. Rothenberg concluded that Fiorina was "like a dream come true" for Democratic opposition researchers.[167]
Defense Business Board and Central Intelligence Agency
Fiorina performed unpaid service on the Defense Business Board, which looked at staffing issues, among others, at The Pentagon.[168]
Fiorina spent two years leading the Central Intelligence Agency's External Advisory Board, from 2007 to 2009,[168] and became chair of that board,[169] when the board was first created in 2007 by then-CIA director Michael Hayden during the George W. Bush administration.[170]
U.S. Senate candidacy for California, 2010
On November 4, 2009, Fiorina formally announced her candidacy in the 2010 Senate election in a bid to unseat incumbent Barbara Boxer.[171][172][173][174] Fiorina's campaign in the Republican primary for that seat received a number of endorsements, including one from Sarah Palin in the form of a Facebook note.[175][176][177] Her campaign ad about Republican rival Tom Campbell featuring a "demon sheep"—created by Fiorina advertising consultant Fred Davis III—created international, and negative, publicity.[178][179] After the ad went viral, the California Democratic Party created a parody of the ad depicting Fiorina herself as a demon sheep.[180]
On June 8, 2010, Fiorina won the Republican primary election for the Senate with over 50 percent of the vote, beating Campbell and State Assemblyman Chuck DeVore.[181]
A Los Angeles Times search of public records indicated Fiorina had failed to vote in most elections. Fiorina responded: "I'm a lifelong registered Republican but I haven't always voted, and I will provide no excuse for it. You know, people die for the right to vote. And there are many, many Californians and Americans who exercise that civic duty on a regular basis. I didn't. Shame on me."[182][183]
The Los Angeles Times noted that Fiorina had conservative positions on certain social issues. She personally opposed abortion, except in cases of rape, incest, or endangerment of the mother's life.[184] As a private citizen, she stated that she voted for Proposition 8, which defined marriage as a union between one man and one woman.[185] Following an August 4, 2010, federal court ruling that Proposition 8 was unconstitutional, Fiorina expressed disagreement with the ruling, saying that California voters spoke clearly against same-sex unions when a majority approved the proposition in 2008.[186] She stated that she opposed litmus tests for Supreme Court nominations and did not favor a federal "personhood" amendment.[187] Fiorina had called global warming a "serious issue" but claimed that the science surrounding it is inconclusive, saying "I think we should have the courage to examine the science on an ongoing basis."[188] In a campaign ad, Fiorina likened Boxer's concerns over global warming to worrying about "the weather."[189] Fiorina accepted large contributions from the coal industry[190] as well as Koch Industries.[191] Fiorina opposed the cap and trade legislation supported by Boxer, and thought efforts to control greenhouse gases would cost 3 million jobs and are "massively destructive".[192][193]
In financial disclosures, Fiorina identified her net worth at between US$30 million and US$120 million, and she donated US$5.2 million to her own campaign.[194]
Sarah Palin was set to appear at a GOP fundraiser two weeks ahead of the November 2 election, but neither Meg Whitman nor Fiorina – both big-name Republicans – planned to attend. The prediction was that Palin's primary endorsement would jeopardize her general election candidacy.[195] By October 22, Fiorina had contributed a total of US$6.5 million to her own race.[196]
Boxer won the general election, defeating Fiorina 52.2% to 42.2%.[197]
Reuters reported that nearly a half million dollars in debt from Fiorina's 2010 campaign remained unpaid until May 2015. Twelve former high-level campaign workers told a reporter that they would not work for her again and questioned her budgeting of the campaign. Fiorina did not personally respond to the report. Her campaign remarked that outstanding debts after a campaign are not unusual, and Fiorina's prior campaign debt had been paid in full.[198]
Unlocking Potential Project
Fiorina launched and developed a political action committee (PAC) known as "Up-Project" (short for "Unlocking Potential Project)[199] from 2011 to 2014. The stated mission of the organization is "...to engage women with new messages and new messengers by focusing on personal interactions with voters and going beyond the traditional methods of identifying, persuading and turning-out voters…"[200] In November 2014, The Washington Post reported that "Helping Fiorina chart her political future are consultants Frank Sadler, who once worked for Koch Industries, and Stephen DeMaura, a strategist who heads Americans for Job Security, a pro-business advocacy group in Virginia";[201][202] The Up-Project website lists Fiorina as chair.[203]
American Conservative Union Foundation and CPAC
On October 1, 2013, Al Cardenas, chair of the American Conservative Union (ACU), appointed Fiorina as chair of the American Conservative Union Foundation (ACUF), the ACU's educational arm.[204] The ACU is a conservative 501(c)(4) organization, while the ACUF is its affiliated 501(c)(3) foundation, which organizes the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).[170][204]
Fiorina was co-chair of CPAC 2014, making a speech at the conference.[170] At CPAC 2015, Fiorina again made a speech at the conference.[169][170][205] It was speculated that Fiorina would announce her candidacy for the Republican nomination for president in that speech,[169][170] but Fiorina did not, instead making her official announcement months later, on May 4, 2015, in a television and promotional video, therein repeating her talking points from CPAC and including an attack on Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.[206]
Fiorina resigned as ACU Foundation chair in early 2015.[207]
U.S. presidential campaign, 2016
Fiorina ruled out running for the U.S. Senate in 2016,[208] but refused to rule out running for president in 2016 or Governor of California in 2018.[209][210][211][212] In November 2014, The Washington Post reported that Fiorina was "actively exploring" a run for president. Her business background and status as the only CEO and the only woman in a "sea of suited men" were mentioned as positives, with Republican strategists pointing to her disastrous 2010 Senate campaign, unpaid campaign debt and dismissal from HP as "considerable challenges".[213] In March 2015, Fiorina said on Fox News Sunday that there was a "higher than 90% chance" that she would run for president in 2016.[214]
On May 4, 2015, Fiorina announced her candidacy during an interview on Good Morning America, with George Stephanopoulos.[1] Fiorina entered the race with immediate criticism of Hillary Clinton. It was reported that the GOP sees Fiorina as "the tip of the spear" in its attack of the Clinton campaign because she is uniquely positioned to isolate her criticisms of Clinton from claims of gender bias.[215]
Shortly after Fiorina announced her entry into the 2016 presidential race, in a replay of her 2010 senatorial race, the social media and editorial outlets questioned her tenure as HP's CEO as a basis for her run for president, focusing around US job cuts and offshoring that Fiorina directed during her tenure at HP, contrasting it with the high compensation bonuses she received from the company.[216] Campaign Manager, Sarah Isgur Flores, deflected the job cut criticism saying, Fiorina "worked hard to save as many jobs as possible."[217][218]
On August 6, Fiorina participated in Fox News's first GOP debate. Failing to qualify for one of the Fox News prime-time debate slots, she was relegated to the debate airing earlier the same day.[219] Fiorina's performance led news sources to conclude she had won the early debate.[220][221][222] Following the debate, several pundits correctly predicted that her polling numbers would surge.[223][224] On August 9, Fiorina reported an uptick in fundraising support.[225] In an online poll by NBC and SurveyMonkey on August 10, Fiorina came in fourth of the seventeen Republican contenders with 8% of the sampled Republican primary voters saying they would support her in a primary or a caucus, a gain in support of six points from previous polling data.[226]
The National Review pointed out her role as foil to Hillary Clinton, saying "Carly Fiorina is no doubt getting attention because of her unique background, but more and more people are staying to listen because she has something fresh to say", and that "Fiorina also seems to relish the role of being the most pointed critic of Hillary Clinton…. She contrasts her background as a 'problem solver' with Clinton's record as a professional politician."[227] The Nation commented, "With so-called women's issues poised to play an unprecedented role in the upcoming election, Republicans need someone who can troll Hillary Clinton without seeming sexist."[228] While noting she was named "the most powerful woman in business" by Fortune Magazine in 1998, Steve Deace of the Conservative Review stated, "Fiorina is a cross between Carson and Trump. She has some of Carson's inspirational biography, and some of Trump's business acumen/resume."[229]
As part of her financial disclosures related to her candidacy, Fiorina reported a net worth of US$59 million, with US$12 million in income in 2013.[230][231] International Business Times estimates Fiorina's net worth between US$30 million and US$120 million.[232]
Her performances in early debates for the Republican primary nomination, particularly her rebukes of front runner Donald Trump in the September 16, 2015 debate, earned her significant momentum as a dark-horse candidate.[233][234][235]
Political positions
Abortion
Fiorina describes herself as pro-life.[236] She has expressed support for legislation to ban abortions 20 weeks after fertilization, with an exception for cases of rape, incest, or danger to the life of the mother.[237] Fiorina supports overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion in the United States,[237] and supports eliminating federal funding for Planned Parenthood.[236][238]
The National Right to Life Committee, the Susan B. Anthony List and the California ProLife Council all endorsed Fiorina's 2010 U.S. Senate campaign in California.[239]
In a September 2015 Republican presidential candidates' debate on CNN, Fiorina was harshly critical of Planned Parenthood and their involvement in fetal tissue donation.[240][241] Referencing secret recordings made by the anti-abortion group Center for Medical Progress (CMP), she stated: "I dare Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama to watch these tapes. Watch a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking, while someone says, 'We have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.'"[242]
According to the website PolitiFact, however, the video footage Fiorina referred to was not obtained from a Planned Parenthood clinic. It was stock footage of an unrelated live fetus, obtained from the Grantham Collection, "an organization that hopes to stem abortion by promoting graphic images of the procedure." It was then added by CMP to dramatize the description by StemExpress procurement technician Holly O'Donnell. In the edited video, O'Donnell alleged that while she was working in a pathology lab at a Planned Parenthood clinic, her supervisor told her that they would procure a brain from a well preserved fetus. O'Donnell said: "I'm sitting here looking at this fetus, and its heart is beating, and I don't know what to think."[242][240][241]
The New York Times reported that "while the authenticity of the videos remains a subject of debate, Mrs. Fiorina appears to have exaggerated their contents,"[243] and PolitiFact said "Fiorina makes it sound as if the footage shows what Planned Parenthood is alleged to have done. In fact, the stock footage was added to the video to dramatize its content. We rate her statement Mostly False."[242]
Climate change
In a February 2015 speech, Fiorina acknowledged the scientific opinion on climate change,[237] but expressed skepticism that government can affect the issue,[237][244] and has "implied that targeting the coal industry will not solve the problem".[237]
On April 4, 2015, Fiorina spoke about how California has fared in the 2012–15 North American drought, stating that "liberal environmentalists" have brought what she described as a "tragedy", and that California is an example of "liberals being willing to sacrifice other people's lives and livelihoods at the altar of their ideology".[245]
Drugs
Fiorina said in May 2015 that "drug addiction shouldn't be criminalized", and cited "decriminalizing drug addiction and drug use" as an example of a successful reform.[246]
Fiorina opposes legalization of marijuana, but says that she believes in states' rights, and that as president she will not enforce the federal ban on marijuana in Colorado, where voters have legalized marijuana as a matter of state law.[247]
In the second Republican Presidential debate, on September 16, 2015, Fiorina responded to a question about enforcing Federal laws against marijuana by stating that we should invest more in the treatment of drugs, and that she had "buried a child to drug addiction", referring to her stepdaughter Lori who died at age 35, after struggling with alcohol, prescription pills and bulimia.[246][248][249]
Economy
Fiorina opposed the 2009 federal stimulus act, calling it a waste of taxpayer money.[244]
Fiorina has said she would cut the pay of federal workers and base their compensation on performance.[244]
Education
While running for president, Fiorina has been a critic of the Common Core State Standards, calling them a "heavy-handed and standardized" example of "Washington bureaucracy" in May 2015.[250][251] In September 2015, Fiorina said: "No Child Left Behind, Race to the Top, Common Core — they’re all big, bureaucratic programs that are failing our nation.[252]
This was a reversal of her position on federal education policies during her 2010 campaign for U.S. Senate from California.[252][253] In that campaign, Fiorina issued a position paper in which she "strongly advocated for metric-based accountability in schools" and "praised No Child Left Behind as setting high standards, and Race to the Top for using internationally-benchmarked measures."[237]
Also in 2010, Fiorina supported "a voucher program for the areas, or neighborhoods, or student populations most in need".[254] In 2015, Fiorina wrote that she supported a school choice or voucher program for all students.[251]
Fiorina said at the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference that President Obama's proposal for free community college was intended "to distract us from the fact that we have too many failing high schools".[254]
At a May 2015 event, Fiorina asserted that the federal government "in the last several years under the Obama administration has nationalized the student loan industry."[255] The Annenberg Public Policy Center's FactCheck.org stated that "Fiorina gave a misleading description" since "private and federal student loans are available now, just as they were in the past."[255]
Foreign and military policy
Fiorina has criticized the international nuclear agreement with Iran, saying that Iran is "at the heart" of evil in the Middle East;[256] that the agreement is a "flawed deal";[257] and that "there is a lot of reason to be suspicious" of it.[258] Fiorina said that: "It would be different if Iran was a good actor and had negotiated in good faith all this time but they haven't" and said "If you want a good deal, you've got to walk away sometimes. We never did."[258] Fiorina also suggested that vertification provisions in the agreement were insufficient and that approval of the agreement by the international community and the U.S.'s negotiating partners was suspect because Russia and China have an interest in gaining access to Iran's economy and the European Union "has negotiated, frankly, a number of weak deals."[258]
Speaking on Russia-U.S. relations and the Ukraine crisis during her 2015 campaign, Fiorina said that if president, she would "arm Ukraine," "conduct regular, aggressive military exercises in the Baltic states," "begin rebuilding the Sixth Fleet," "begin rebuilding the missile defense program in Poland," and "probably send a few thousand more troops into Germany" to "send a very clear message to Vladimir Putin."[259][260]
Fiorina has also expressed support for an additional "50 Army brigades, 36 Marine battalions, between 300 and 350 naval ships, and an upgrade of 'every leg of the nuclear triad.'"[261] This proposed military buildup would be an increase of more than US$500 billion (excluding a nuclear arsenal overhaul, which would cost some additional sum of money) over existing planned defense spending of US$5 trillion over the next decade.[261]
In a January 2015 discussion with an Iowa political blogger, Fiorina said of the Chinese: "They're not terribly imaginative. They’re not entrepreneurial. They don't innovate. That's why they're stealing our intellectual property."[262]
Health care
Fiorina criticized the Affordable Care Act (ACA) health care reform legislation during the debate in 2009 that led to the act's passage.[263] Fiorina has supported repealing the ACA during both her 2010 Senate run in California[264][265] and her 2015 presidential campaign.[266][267] Fiorina has called the law "deeply flawed"[268] and a "vast legislative overreach."[266] Fiorina criticized the U.S. Supreme Court's decision upholding the law in King v. Burwell, calling it "outrageous."[268] Fiorina has proposed establishing federally-subsidized but state-run "high-risk pools to help those who are truly needy."[267] In 2010 and 2015, Fiorina called for making the health insurance market more competitive, although she has not provided specifics.[264][237]
Referring to childhood vaccinations, Fiorina has said: "When in doubt, it is always the parents' choice."[269] She has defended the right of school districts to require that children be vaccinated against common communicable diseases, but said that districts should not be permitted to require that children receive "some of these more esoteric immunizations" in order to attend public schools.[269]
Immigration
In California, Fiorina supported the DREAM Act, which would allow children brought to the U.S. by their parents when they were under the age of 16 to secure permanent U.S. residency and a path to citizenship, if they graduate from college or serve in the armed forces.[237][244][270]
In a May 2015 interview with Katie Couric, Fiorina said that she does not support a path for citizenship "for those who came here illegally and who have stayed here illegally."[270] Fiorina drew a distinction between people in that category, and those who came legally but overstayed their visas.[270]
Fiorina has stressed the need to improve border security before undertaking comprehensive immigration reform.[244][270]
LGBT issues
In November 2009, during a Wall Street Journal interview, Fiorina said that she voted in favor of Proposition 8, a California ballot proposition that banned same-sex marriage in that state, but noted that "she created a strong program of domestic partner benefits while at HP."[271]
During the 2010 United States Senate election in California, Fiorina was endorsed by GOProud, a gay conservative organization.[272]
In 2010, while answering a Christian Coalition questionnaire, Fiorina said that she supported a federal constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.[273] During an interview with the conservative Christian website Caffeinated Thoughts at a Dallas County, Iowa Republican event in May 2015, Fiorina reversed her previous position, saying that she now opposed such a measure: "I think the Supreme Court ruling will become the law of the land, and however much I may agree or disagree with it, I wouldn't support an amendment to reverse it."[273][274] She further stated that "government shouldn't discriminate on how it provides benefits and ... people have a right to their religious views and those views need to be protected."[274]
In August 2010, Fiorina indicated on a Christian Coalition questionnaire that she opposed enforcing the 1993 law banning homosexuals in the military.[275][276]
In 2010, Fiorina stated that she supported the Defense of Marriage Act, but also supported civil unions.[277] In 2015, Fiorina reaffirmed her support for civil unions and stated that those in such unions should receive the same government benefits accorded to married persons.[278]
On September 19, 2010, in a Faith2Action survey, she opposed the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.[275]
On March 17, 2013, on ABC News, Fiorina said "I think we have to be careful, because John Boehner's views, which are different from Rob Portman's views, are equally sincere. And I think when we get into trouble on this debate when we assume that people who support gay marriage are open and compassionate and people who don't are not. It's why I believe the right way to solve these very personal issues is to let people vote on them, don't have judges decide it, don't even have representative government decide it, let people vote on it in the states. I think people of both points of view, accept the democratic process. What they don't always accept is a bunch of self-important, self-appointed judges saying this is culturally the new norm."[279]
In April 2015, Fiorina defended Indiana's Religious Freedom Restoration Act. She stated that the Indiana bill is about the "opportunity to practice their religions freely" and "It has not and has never been a license to discriminate."[280] On April 2, 2015, in an interview with USA Today, she described it as "shameful" how, in her view, liberals have fanned the furor over the Indiana law. "I honestly believe this is a set of liberal political activists who practice a game of identity politics and divisive politics to whip people into a frenzy, and I think it's very destructive to the fabric of this country," she said. She blasted business leaders in Silicon Valley and elsewhere who have criticized the Indiana law as discriminatory, questioning why there isn't similar outrage "...in the Twitterverse about the subjugation of the rights of women and gays in many countries in which these companies do business. Where is the outrage about that? Where is the outrage about how gays are treated in Iran, for example? Where is the outrage about how women are treated in Algeria?"[281]
During an April 2015 interview with ABC News, Fiorina stated, "I think it's really too bad, honestly, that CEOs are being pressured [...] What this law basically says is that a person can push back against ... either federal government mandate or state government mandate to exert their religious liberties.[282]
In June 2015, as a response to the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which held that there is a fundamental right to same-sex marriage under the Fourteenth Amendment, Fiorina said the decision was "only the latest example of an activist Court. I do not agree that the Court can or should redefine marriage. I believe that responsibility should have remained with states and voters where this conversation has continued in churches, town halls and living rooms around the country."[283]
Maternity leave
Fiorina believes employers should decide whether they should provide paid maternity leave to their employees and it should not be mandated by the government, noting that some companies in the private sector, such as Netflix, are already doing so to attract talent.[284][285] She also pointed out that HP, while she was CEO, offered paid maternity leave voluntarily.[284]
Minimum wage
Fiorina believes that the federal minimum wage "is a classic example of a policy that is best carried out in the states",[286] saying a national minimum wage does not make sense because economic conditions in New Hampshire varies significantly from more expensive economic conditions in Los Angeles or New York. She also believes that raising the federal minimum wage would "hurt those who are looking for entry-level jobs."[244]
Net neutrality
Fiorina opposes net neutrality rules adopted by the Federal Communications Commission, and has said she would "roll back" that policy, because "Regulation over innovation is a really bad role for government."[237][287][288]
Regulation
Fiorina "generally believes that reducing government regulations helps to spur the economy."[244]
Fiorina has condemned the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, saying in April 2015 that "We should get rid of Dodd-Frank and start again."[289]
Fiorina has inaccurately stated that not "a single regulation has ever been repealed."[290] Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post "Fact Checker" column gave this statement three out of four Pinocchios, finding that "Important parts of the economy have been deregulated in recent decades. While the repeal of a specific rule is relatively rare, there are certainly examples."[290] Susan E. Dudley, director of the Regulatory Studies Center at George Washington University, said that Fiorina is "generally right that regulations, once issued, are rarely revisited and even more rarely actually repealed".[290]
Taxation
During her 2010 Senate campaign, Fiorina "called for eliminating the estate tax and capital gains taxes for investments in small businesses, and lowering marginal tax rates."[244]
Fiorina opposes proposals to increase the federal gas tax or state gas taxes in order to fund the Highway Trust Fund, asserting in a February 2015 Wall Street Journal op-ed that "Any gas tax hike, big or small, will harm American families and hurt economic growth."[291] She favors lowering tax rates, simplifying the tax code, and closing loopholes that she says mostly benefit wealthy taxpayers.[292][293]
Technology employees
Fiorina favors expanding the H-1B visa program.[294][295][296][297] Writing in opposition to proposals she considered protectionist in a 2004 Wall Street Journal op-ed, Fiorina said that while "America is the most innovative country," it would not remain so if the country were to "run away from the reality of the global economy."[298] Fiorina said to Congress in 2004: "There is no job that is America's God-given right anymore. We have to compete for jobs as a nation."[295] While Fiorina argued that the only way to "protect U.S. high-tech jobs over the long haul was to become more competitive [in the United States]," her comments prompted "strong reactions" from some technology workers, who argued that lower wages outside the United States encouraged the offshoring of American jobs.[299]
Personal life
Fiorina (then Cara Carleton Sneed) married Todd Bartlem, a Stanford classmate, in June 1977. They divorced in 1984.[300] In 1985, she married AT&T executive Frank Fiorina, the second marriage for both. Fiorina has said that they wanted to have children together but: "That wasn't God's plan."[301][302][303] Fiorina and her husband live in Mason Neck, Virginia.
Frank Fiorina had two daughters, Traci and Lori Ann, from his first marriage. Their mother, Patricia, was awarded custody of the two, following the divorce.[304] Fiorina helped her husband with raising his daughters. Lori Ann struggled with alcoholism, substance abuse and bulimia. She died in 2009 at age 35.[246][249]
In February 2009, Fiorina was diagnosed with stage II breast cancer. She underwent a double mastectomy[305][169] at Stanford Hospital in March 2009, followed by chemotherapy, which caused her to temporarily lose her hair, and later radiation therapy.[306] She was given "an excellent prognosis for a full recovery."[307][308] In late 2009, during her campaign for the United States Senate seat held by Barbara Boxer, Fiorina humorously told a group of supporters: "I have to say that after chemotherapy, Barbara Boxer just isn't that scary anymore."[309]
Bibliography
- Fiorina, Carly (2006). Tough Choices: A Memoir, Portfolio Hardcover, ISBN 1-59-184133-X.
- Fiorina, Carly (2015). Rising to the Challenge: My Leadership Journey, Penguin Group (Sentinel), ISBN 1-59-184803-2.
See also
References
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Ms. Fiorina's ouster reflects increasingly clear strategic problems at H-P. The company faces fierce competition from Dell Inc. in personal computers and International Business Machines Corp. in computer services and corporate computing.
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For a time she dreamed of being a classical pianist.
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(help) - ^ Swartz, Jon (December 4, 2001). "Many H-P employees oppose deal with Compaq". USA Today. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
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(help) - ^ a b c "Many H-P employees oppose deal with Compaq". USA Today. December 4, 2001. Retrieved August 15, 2015.
While Fiorina travels aboard a US$30 million Gulfstream IV, employees joke they can't order books and supplies.
- ^ "HP at Cultural Crossroads". IBS Center for Management Research. Retrieved August 16, 2015.
- ^ Richtel, Matt. "Can Hewlett-Compaq Succeed Beyond PC's?", New York Times (September 5, 2001): "The new company would have 135,000 employees, a figure that includes 15,000 job cuts, in addition to 11,000 previously announced cutbacks (5,000 at Compaq and 6,000 at Hewlett-Packard) that have yet to take place."
- ^ Williams, Molly (September 5, 2001). "H-P's Fiorina Takes On Hefty Job In Turning Around Merged Giant". The Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Abcarian, Robin. "Profits may not equal success", The Los Angeles Times (May 20, 2010): "According to HP's government filings, the company had 84,400 employees worldwide in 2001, the year before the merger. In 2001, Compaq had 63,700 full-time employees. Together the two companies would have a total workforce of 148,100. But in that same period, HP bought more than a dozen other U.S. companies with at least 8,000 employees, according to company filings, press releases and news reports. And in 2005, when Fiorina was fired, the company reported a worldwide workforce of 150,000."
- ^ a b Kessler, Glenn. "Carly Fiorina's misleading claims about her business record", The Washington Post (May 8, 2015): "[T]he number of [HP] employees was 84,800 in 1999 and 151,000 in 2004, according to the 10-K reports. On paper, that certainly looks like an increase in jobs. But before the merger with Compaq, HP had 86,200 employees and Compaq had 63,700 employees. That adds up to 149,900. HP’s filings show that the combined company had 141,000 employees in 2002 and 142,000 employees in 2003. By 2005, the number was 150,000. In other words, the number of employees barely budged from the pre-merger total–and people lost jobs as a result. The Los Angeles Times, evaluating Fiorina’s record when she ran for the Senate in 2010, noted that during her tenure HP also acquired more than a dozen other companies with at least 8,000 employees. Indeed, Fiorina has acknowledged firing more than 30,000 workers in the wake of the Compaq merger."
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Rankings By: Portfolio.com
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The Foundation Board [not to confuse with the Managing Board] is responsible for inspiring business and public confidence by ensuring a flawless standard of governance. Board members are individuals with unique leadership experience from business, politics, academia and civil society.
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- ^ "TSMC Says Carly Fiorina Agrees to Join Board of Directors as Independent Member" (Press release). TSMC. April 6, 2006. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ "Gov. McDonnell Makes Appointments to JMU Board of Visitors" (Press release). James Madison University. July 9, 2012. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
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Before announcing her bid Monday for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, Carly Fiorina resigned from James Madison University's board of visitors. A replacement will likely be chosen next month, according to Brian Coy, a spokesman for Gov. Terry McAuliffe. Coy confirmed that Fiorina notified the governor's office of her resignation as vice rector in a March 27 letter saying, "her current activities preclude her ability to give this board the time and...
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(help) - ^ a b c d e Williams, Lance (July 10, 2009). "Fiorina failed to register business, foundation". SFGate. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
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Documents 2001-2009, organizations.
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Year-Old USAID/State Department/Private Sector Initiative Unveils Initial Aid to Local Groups; Chair Carly Fiorina, USAID's Lisa Chiles, and CAFAmerica's Saxon-Harrold Report on Progress
- ^ a b Opportunity International (February 14, 2013). "Opportunity International Joins Forces with Carly Fiorina's One Woman Initiative; Fiorina to Serve as Global Ambassador to Opportunity" (Press Release). Opportunity.org. Oak Brook, IL: Opportunity International, a 501(c)3 nonprofit. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
- ^ Opportunity International (May 4, 2015). "Carly Fiorina Steps Down as Global Board Chair of Opportunity International; US Board Chair Mark Thompson to Assume New Role Effective Immediately" (Press Release). (opportunity.org). Oak Brook, IL: Opportunity International, a 501(c)3 nonprofit. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
- ^ a b Jackson, David (May 4, 2015). "Fiorina jumps into GOP presidential race". USA Today. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
- ^ Rucker, Philip (November 25, 2014). "Carly Fiorina actively explores 2016 presidential run but faces GOP critics". Washington Post. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
But Fiorina, 60, has considerable challenges, chiefly that she has sought but never held public office.
- ^ "Carly Fiorina will run for president as a successful tech CEO. Silicon Valley says that's a fantasy". The Guardian.
Fiorina, 60, has never held public office.
- ^ Pengelly, Martin (May 31, 2015). "Carly Fiorina highlights outsider role: most in US 'have never heard my name". The Guardian.
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(help) - ^ Jacoby, Mary (April 22, 2008). "Carly Fiorina Gets a Plug for VP Job". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Eilperin, Juliet (January 23, 2008). "McCain Outlines Economic Plans". The Trail. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
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{{cite episode}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Why Carly Fiorina Is So Important to John McCain". Newsweek. New York City. May 13, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
I'm talking about Carly Fiorina, the former chief executive officer of Hewlett-Packard, being sent out to reassure business-class voters on behalf of John McCain. Fiorina has emerged as the most prominent surrogate on economics issues in any of the major campaigns, and her alliance with McCain suggests both his strength and his weakness on the subject.
- ^ Rothenberg, Stuart (June 30, 2008). "Is Carly Fiorina the Answer to McCain's Prayers for a VP?". RealClearPolitics. Chicago. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
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Sie dürfte sich indes mit ihren filmtechnisch stümperhaften, inhaltlich dümmlichen Werbespots gegen ihren innerparteilichen Widersacher Tom Campbell komprimittiert haben. Darin zeichnet Fiorina den allgemein als kompetent und freundlich geltenden Abgeordneten als gefährlichen Wolf im Schafspelz.
{{cite news}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Feldmann, Linda (May 7, 2010). "Demon Sheep: the sequel, starring Carly Fiorina". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
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Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina and her husband have a net worth of $59 million, her campaign said late Wednesday, making her one of the wealthiest candidates in the race so far.
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(help) - ^ a b CNN (September 16, 2015), CNN transcript of GOP Presidential Debate. Aired September 16, 2015 - 20:10 ET, CNN, retrieved September 18, 2015
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(help) - ^ a b CNN (September 16, 2015), Carly Fiorina rips Planned Parenthood, CNN YouTube Channel, retrieved September 18, 2015
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(help) - ^ a b c Carroll, Lauren (September 17, 2015), At CNN debate, Carly Fiorina urges others to watch Planned Parenthood videos, PolitiFact.com, retrieved September 18, 2015
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(help) - ^ Alan Rappeport, Carly Fiorina Said to Exaggerate Content of Planned Parenthood Videos, New York Times (September 17, 2015).
- ^ a b c d e f g h Gerry, Mullany (May 4, 2015). "Carly Fiorina on the Issues". The New York Times. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
- ^ Brietman, Kendall (April 6, 2015). "Carly Fiorina blames environmentalists for California drought". Politico. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
- ^ a b c Johnson, Jenna (May 4, 2015). "Carly Fiorina: 'Drug addiction shouldn't be criminalized.'". Washington Post. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
- ^ Jesse Rifkin, Carly Fiorina Wouldn't Enforce Federal Marijuana Ban In States With Legalization, Huffington Post (May 8, 2015).
- ^ Ryan Teague Beckwith. "Republican Debate: Read the Transcript of the Second Debate". TIME.com.
My husband Frank and I buried a child to drug addiction. So we must invest more in the treatment of drugs. I agree with Senator Paul, I agree with state's rights. But we are misleading young people when we tell them that marijuana is just like having a beer. It's not. And the marijuana that kids are smoking today is not the same as the marijuana that Jeb Bush smoked 40 years ago... We do need criminal justice reform. We have the highest incarceration rates in the world. Two-thirds of the people in our prisons are there for non-violent offenses, mostly drug-related. It's clearly not working. But we need to tell young people the truth. Drug addiction is an epidemic and it is taking too many of our young people. I know this sadly from personal experience.
- ^ a b Berenson, Tessa (May 3, 2015). "Carly Fiorina Gets Personal in Her New Book". TIME. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
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(help) - ^ Mark Hensch, Fiorina: US education 'a big problem', The Hill (May 31, 2015).
- ^ a b Carly Fiorina, How to Fix Our Broken Education System? Give Every Parent and Student a Choice and a Chance, Iowa Republican (July 22, 2015).
- ^ a b Ilan Ben-Meir, Carly Fiorina Has Completely Reversed Her Position On Federal Education Policies Since 2010, BuzzFeed News (September 11, 2015).
- ^ Alyson Klein, Huckabee, Carson, Fiorina Join GOP Presidential Race, Education Week (May 5, 2015) ("Fiorina's position on Common Core has also, umm, 'evolved.' As an ultimately unsuccessful Senate candidate in 2010, Fiorina praised the Obama administration's Race to the Top program—which encouraged the adoption of Common Core—on her campaign website. Without mentioning Common Core by name specifically, she lauded the program for championing 'internationally benchmarked' standards and assessments that help prepare students for the 21st-century job market. But more recently, she has tweaked others in the GOP field, especially former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, for their support of the standards....").
- ^ a b Maureen Sullivan, "Carly Fiorina on Education: 6 Things the Presidential Candidate Wants You to Know", Forbes (May 4, 2015).
- ^ a b Lori Robertson, Fiorina Misleads on Student Loans, FactCheck.org (May 7, 2015).
- ^ David Sirota & Andrew Perez, Republican Debate: Carly Fiorina Positions As GOP Candidate Contrast With Longtime Record, International Business Times (August 6, 2015).
- ^ Carly Fiorina, Opinion: A false choice and a flawed deal, Fox News (April 2, 2015).
- ^ a b c Kaplan, Rebecca (July 14, 2015). "Carly Fiorina: U.S. broke every rule in Iran negotiations". CBS News.
- ^ Eleanor Clift, This Is Carly, Hear Her Roar, Daily Beast (April 22, 2015).
- ^ Melinda Henneberger, How Carly Fiorina Did It: Pugilism With a Precise Touch, Bloomberg News (September 17, 2015).
- ^ a b Kate Brannen, Carly Fiorina's Military Would Cost an Extra $500 Billion (And That's Before the New Nukes), Daily Beast (September 17, 2015).
- ^ Lydia O'Connor, Carly Fiorina Calls the Chinese Unimaginative Idea Thieves, Huffington Post (May 26, 2015).
- ^ Fiorina: Obama might have to 'eat his words' on health reform, CNN (November 22, 2009).
- ^ a b Christina Hoag, Fiorina: Health reform must make insurers compete, Associated Press (October 21, 2010).
- ^ Frank Bruni, Carly Fiorina Means Business, New York Times Magazine (June 2, 2010) ("[D]uring this campaign, [Fiorina] has assiduously courted the right, calling for the repeal of health care reform").
- ^ a b "Meet the Press Transcript - November 16, 2014". Meet The Press. Washington, D.C.: NBC News. November 16, 2014. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
- ^ a b Sahil Kapur, Carly Fiorina's Obamacare Replacement Plan Hasn't Fared Well With House Republicans, Bloomberg Politics (May 4, 2015).
- ^ a b David Jackson, GOP candidates maintain their attacks on Obamacare, USA Today (June 25, 2015).
- ^ a b Betsy Klein & Tal Kopan, Republicans spar over vaccinations, CNN (August 14, 2015).
- ^ a b c d David Knowles, Carly Fiorina: No Path to Citizenship for those Who Came to U.S. Illegally, Bloomberg (May 4, 2015).
- ^ John Fund, She Wants to Reboot California, Wall Street Journal (November 28, 2009).
- ^ "Carly Fiorina Earns Endorsement of GOProud - Carly Fiorina for California - CarlyforCalifornia.com". Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ a b Amanda Terkel, Carly Fiorina Changes Mind On Amending Constitution To Bar Same-Sex Marriage, Huffington Post (May 5, 2015).
- ^ a b Shane Vander Hart (May 9, 2015). "Carly Fiorina Would Not Support Reversing SCOTUS Marriage Decision". Caffeinated Thoughts. Des Moines, Iowa. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ^ a b Carly Fiorina on Civil Rights
- ^ Carly Fiorina on Homeland Security
- ^ Jason Linkins, Fiorina Opposes Same-Sex Marriage With the Help of Political Cover From Democrats, Huffington Post (September 2, 2010).
- ^ Carly Fiorina Reaffirms Support for Same-Sex Civil Unions, Bloomberg News (April 1, 2015).
- ^ ABC News. "Page 6: 'This Week' Transcript: Speaker of the House John Boehner - ABC News". ABC News. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ "Carly Fiorina - The recent events in Indiana have prompted... - Facebook". Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ Susan Page, USA TODAY (April 1, 2015). "Fiorina backs religious freedom law, marriage equality". USA TODAY. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ ABC News. "Carly Fiorina: 'CEOs Are Being Pressured' to Oppose 'Religious Freedom' Laws". ABC News. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ Nick Gass and Jonathan Topaz (June 26, 2015). "2016 election: Supreme Court's gay marriage decision prompts candidate responses on Twitter - POLITICO". POLITICO. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ a b Walsh, Kenneth T. (August 10, 2015). "Carly Fiorina Gains National Attention". U.S. News & World Report. Washington, D.C. Retrieved August 16, 2015.
I'm not saying I oppose paid maternity leave. What I'm saying is I oppose the federal government mandating paid maternity leave to every company out there. I don't think it's the role of government to dictate to the private sector how to manage their businesses, especially when it's pretty clear that the private sector, like Netflix ... is doing the right thing because they know it helps them attract the right talent.
- ^ Jamieson, Dave (August 9, 2015). "Carly Fiorina Opposes A Paid Maternity Leave Requirement". The Huffington Post. New York. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ McElveen, Josh (April 24, 2015). "Conversation with the Candidate: Carly Fiorina (Part 2)". WMUR-TV. Manchester, New Hampshire: Hearst Television. Retrieved August 22, 2015.
I think a minimum wage is a classic example of a policy that is best carried out in the states, because if you are here in Nashua, New Hampshire, it is not the same set of economic conditions or expensive living as L.A. or New York City. To me, a national minimum wage does not make a lot of sense.
- ^ Charlotte Alter, Carly Fiorina Says She Would 'Roll Back' Net Neutrality Rules, Time (May 5, 2015).
- ^ Carly Fiorina, Op-ed: Obama's net neutrality failure, CNN (April 7, 2015).
- ^ Kevin Cirilli, Fiorina: Abolish Wall Street reform law, The Hill (April 9, 2015).
- ^ a b c Glenn Kessler, Fact Checker: Carly Fiorina's claim that not 'a single regulation' has ever been repealed, Washington Post (April 27, 2015).
- ^ Carly Fiorina & Penny Nance, Op-ed: Cheaper Gas? Politicians Want a Tax Fill-Up, Wall Street Journal (February 11, 2015).
- ^ Ehrenfreund, Max (September 17, 2015). "A simple guide to what Carly Fiorina actually believes". Washington Post. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
- ^ Desjardins, Lisa and McHaney, Sarah (May 4, 2015). "What does Carly Fiorina believe? Where the candidate stands on 10 issues". PBS NewsHour. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Arrington, Michael (March 17, 2008). "McCain Embraces Tech Executives For White House Push". TechCrunch. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ a b Puzzanghera, Jim (January 8, 2004). "Coalition of High-Tech Firms to Urge Officials to Help Keep U.S. Competitive". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Cullen, Drew (January 8, 2004). "US tech industry stands up for overseas jobs". The Register. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Lochhead, Carolyn (January 8, 2004). "Tech bosses defend overseas hiring". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Fiorina, Carly (February 13, 2004). "Be Creative, Not Protectionist". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Lochhead, Carolyn (January 9, 2004). "Economists back tech industry's overseas hiring". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Fiorina, Tough Choices, Ch. 6, Choices of the Heart.
- ^ Fiorina, Tough Choices, pp. 88, 93-96, Chapter 12: Confrontation and Understanding.
- ^ Lublin, Joann S.; Blumenstein, Rebecca (July 22, 1999). "In the Upscale Fiorina Family, She's the CEO and He's Home but She Enjoys the Simple Life". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on June 23, 2003.
- ^ "Potential VP Bios: Republicans". CBS. June 16, 2008. Retrieved November 4, 2009.
- ^ Collins, Laura (July 14, 2015). "Carly Fiorina's claims of motherhood and amazing rise under fire". Daily Mail. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
- ^ "Carly Fiorina Is Hospitalized". The New York Times. October 26, 2010. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Marinucci, Carla; Garofoli, Joe (November 7, 2009). "Fiorina comes out swinging – at her cancer". SFGate. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
- ^ Marinucci, Carla (March 3, 2009). "Carly Fiorina has surgery for breast cancer". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
- ^ Musil, Steven (March 2, 2009). "Carly Fiorina treated for breast cancer". CNET. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
- ^ Zapler, Mike (November 4, 2009). "Fiorina takes fight to Boxer in Senate campaign kickoff". Mercury News. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
Further reading
- Fiorina, Carly. Tough Choices: A Memoir. Portfolio Hardcover, 2006. (hardcover: ISBN 1-59184-133-X, abridged audiobook: ISBN 0-14-305907-6)
- Anders, George. Perfect Enough: Carly Fiorina and the Reinvention of Hewlett-Packard. New York: Penguin Group, 2003. ISBN 1-59184-003-1.
- Burrows, Peter. Backfire: Carly Fiorina's High-Stakes Battle for the Soul of Hewlett-Packard. Wiley, 2003. ISBN 0-471-26765-1.
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