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Showing Original Post only (View all)Carly Fiorina will run for president as a successful tech CEO. Silicon Valley says that's a fantasy [View all]
Carly Fiorina will run for president as a successful tech CEO. Silicon Valley says that's a fantasy
When Carly Fiorina launches her campaign for president this week, her message to the world will be emphatic: what she did for HP, she can do for America.
From spaghetti dinners in New Hampshire to startup conferences in New York, the former head of Hewlett-Packard is expected to keep staking her claim as a pioneering executive prodigy: It is only in the United States of America that a young woman can start as a secretary and become CEO of the largest technology company in the world, she recently posted on Facebook, next to a low rating from a pro-choice group that she called a badge of honor.
Fiorina, 60, has never held public office. A 2010 run for US senate collapsed amid images of private jets and million-dollar yachts. Now, she hopes the revived record of a dot-com businesswoman will vault her over the otherwise all-male Republican field of mostly professional politicians or at least lead to a spot as one of their vice-presidential running mates to face Hillary Clinton head-on.
We went from a market laggard to market leader, Fiorina has said of her six years running the computer giant. Unlike Hillary, I have actually accomplished something.
But those who watched what Fiorina did to HP mishandling the $25bn acquisition of Compaq, getting ousted by the board in 2005 with a $21m golden parachute, repeatedly being named one of the worst CEOs in American corporate history say those supposed accomplishments are already coming back to haunt her run for the White House.
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/may/03/carly-fiorina-run-for-president-hewlett-packard