Whitman for Governor: How Bad Could It Be?

January 5, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Early reaction to the Meg Whitman for Governor story seems less than thrilled with the idea. Two early memes: One, she's an unknown. Two, she's known only for eBay, which is bad.

From BloggingStocks: Should Whitman take the plunge, the odds are against her. For one thing, no one outside of stock geeks and disgruntled eBay sellers knows her name. Of course, several million dollars worth of television advertising will take care of that.

From TechCrunch: Even though she left eBay a year ago, much of her appeal will be tied to the public’s perception of the company, which has seen better days. If eBay turns itself around and is once again seen as a success in two years, that will help her campaign. But if eBay sellers and buyers continue to flee from the service, that will hurt her. She cannot escape the eBay association.

Me: Is the assumption that Whitman's appeal is limited to a handful of eBay investors, sellers and techies a bit overblown? I mean, if Steve Ballmer quit Microsoft to run for office in Washington, would a faltering stock price and a tech-specific reputation keep anyone from thinking he just might be qualified for the job? And is she really less cut out to run a state than the Terminator? Discuss.

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OK, let's talk about the potential governors while we're at it.

How about Jerry Brown again? He's been making noisese about this for months now.

I hear Gavin Newsome thinks he can make the cut too.

Is John Garimendi throwing his hat in the ring?

The non-political business savvy people with a good sense of management stand the best chance of being sharp enough to manage the disparate interest and in-fighting as well as the chops to be a good manager.

I think she is just centrist enough and a tough business manager to help pull us together.

Meg Whitman took eBay from the big startup to the billion dollar successful corporation it is.

Do you prefer someone who has spent their life in politics? As Arnold says," Someone who has signed the front of checks and not just the back?"

Mike of CA 10:45PM January 10, 2009

The Ticker

The Ticker

Kirk Shinkle is a senior editor at U.S. News. He writes daily about ups and downs in equity markets, sectors and stocks. Formerly, he covered business and economics on both coasts for Investor's Business Daily.

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