Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman is expected to officially declare her candidacy for governor of California on Tuesday.
Meg Whitman
(Credit: eBay)Whitman, who has never served an elected public office, will announce her bid for the Republican nomination in 2010 during a speech in Fullerton, Calif. She will reportedly campaign on a platform of cutting state spending by $15 billion and reducing the state's workforce by 17 percent.
Whitman, 53, will become a leading Republican candidate to succeed outgoing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who will retire because of term limits.
Whitman stepped down as CEO of eBay in March 2008, a decade after she transformed the company from a tiny auction site to an Internet icon. During her tenure, the company's split-adjusted share price leaped from just over $1 to a 2004 peak of almost $60, before plummeting to a recent price of under $14.
In the past year, the billionaire Internet executive has taken a more high-profile role in the Republican Party. Whitman served as an adviser to Republican Sen. John McCain's presidential campaign and endorsed him during a speech at the party's convention in St. Paul, Minn., last year.
Possible primary rivals include State Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner, a former Silicon Valley exec who founded SnapTrack, a cell phone locating company, and sold it to Qualcomm for $1 billion in January 2000. Another GOP rival is expected to be Tom Campbell, a former U.S. congressman and dean of the business school at University of California at Berkeley.
Likely contenders for the Democratic nomination include Attorney General Jerry Brown, who was already governor 30 years ago, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
More than 100 days after Election Day 2008, the battle between Norm Coleman and Al Franken for a chance to represent Minnesota in the Senate rages on.
Keeping up these disputes costs money, and with a tough fight ahead for Coleman, the Republican incumbent has recruited as many GOP senators as one could fit into a two-minute video to solicit money for him on YouTube.
The Coleman campaign posted the video to its YouTube page on Tuesday. It features calls for financial help from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele, and eight other mostly high-profile senators.
The video was posted one day before a three-judge panel in Minnesota denied Coleman's request to reconsider an earlier ruling to discard several different categories of rejected absentee ballots. With those rejected absentee ballots no longer in play, Coleman has less of a chance of overturning Franken's 225-vote lead in the race. The case could be appealed to a higher court.
"This fight that he's taking on to make sure that every ballot is counted represents the best in democracy, so anything you can do to help Norm financially to make sure that he can tell his story before the court is much appreciated," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) says in the video. "This is the time to step up and help Norm because he's been there for us."
"We need 42 Republicans," says Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.). "We need Norm Coleman to win his fight in Minnesota."
Coleman's video could be seen as one more example of how, after getting trounced by the Democrats' strong online campaigning in 2008, the Republican party is trying to appropriate some of President Obama's methods of using the Internet as a place to gather grassroots support and promote good governance.
The RNC hosted a Tech Summit earlier this month to gather ideas on how the party can better utilize the Internet in its campaigning. Also, House Minority Leader Boehner on Thursday released his second statement calling for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to post online the omnibus appropriations bill, which the House may soon vote on.
"If Democratic leaders plan to schedule a vote on the half-trillion dollar omnibus spending bill next week, they should post the legislation online immediately so the American people have adequate time to read the measure and understand what is in it," Boehner said.
RNC Chairman Michael Steele said at Friday's RNC Tech Summit that the GOP needs to make better use of technology.
(Credit: Stephanie Condon/ CNET Networks)WASHINGTON--The GOP doesn't have a technology problem, Republicans insisted Friday--it has an image problem.
Since Barack Obama deftly used new media and social networks to build unprecedented online support and win the presidency last year, the Republican party has been fighting to catch up to Democrats' use of technology.
"When we get to 2010, I want my campaigns here," Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said as he held up his cell phone at the party's Tech Summit on Friday. "I want whatever we're doing to be within my thumb's reach. We don't want to just do what Obama did in '08--that's the floor."
Steele organized the Tech Summit, held at the party's swanky Capitol Hill Club, to field ideas from anyone willing to share about how the Republican party could make better use of technology.
Yet even though the party has a lesser presence online, its bigger problem is the lack of an inclusive, inspiring message, prominent party leaders and local activists said at the event. The party must decide on a message, they said, and then worry about how to use technology to communicate that message.
"What really matters in the long run is what you communicate, not how you communicate," said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
Democrats had a technological advantage in the 2008 elections because "San Jose and San Francisco is a liberal area," he said. More importantly, though, he said Democrats had the support of "a group of millionaires who hated Bush (and) a country mad about the war and (Hurricane) Katrina."
Republicans, he said, need to focus on popular ideas like the flat tax.
"This is not about outreach, this is about inclusion," Gingrich said.
Inside the Capitol Hill Club, an elegant townhouse a block from the Capitol that serves as RNC headquarters, party activists and platform developers took turns pitching ideas for using new media to communicate with voters. Just as many people, however, took the time to lament the party's lack of a message.
"Technology alone is not the answer to our problems," said Sean Doughtie, the CEO of Taproot Creative, an advertising and new media agency that has done work for the Florida Republican party.
"You can blog about blogging and Twitter about Twittering, but what we've been experiencing is a failure of our brand," Doughtie said, standing at a podium in front of a glass case display of elephant figurines.
Some presenters said the Republican party's lack of technological savvy was overstated.
Mindy Finn, a co-founder of RebuildTheParty.com, said she was optimistic the party could embrace technology because of its past experience. The goal of RebuildTheParty is to build an online grassroots campaign for the GOP.
"Despite what the press says, we actually had an e-campaign in 2004 that did many of the things the Obama campaign did," Finn said. "They just did it with many more people."
The 2004 election, however, took place at a time when Facebook was still an exclusive site for universities and YouTube didn't exist. In the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama had 90 people working on his new media campaign while John McCain had four.
Developers at Friday's event shared ways to bring the GOP back up to speed. The company First Tuesday in November pitched its tracking technology that tells a campaign in real time when their supporters have voted.
Danny Allen, the managing director for the interactive ad agency Sensis, talked about using mobile ads to contact hard to reach audiences like minority groups.
Brian Williams, a vice president for the political data management firm Aristotle, suggested integrating back-end databases with front-end technology to allow developers to create their own tools to reach out to constituencies.
Some developers pitched ways to improve the party's use of technology while also improving its message. Even developing iPhone applications that parody Obama would be a step in the right direction, said Internet marketing strategist Jon Friesch.
"It's something people can laugh at," he said. "Then you start laying the groundwork for changing people's hearts and minds."
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