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Former Corporate CEOs-Turned Politicians Spend Big In 2010 Races

JULIET WILLIAMS   08/ 9/10 11:55 AM ET   AP

Self Funding Candidates Campaign Spending
Self-Funding Candidates Spend Big Bucks In 2010 Election Match-Ups

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the midst of one of the worst recessions in decades, a host of former corporate leaders are spending millions in their quest for elective office, using their personal wealth to push past the political machinery and their own lack of experience.

In California, billionaire former eBay chief executive Meg Whitman has bankrolled more than $91 million of the nearly $100 million her Republican quest for governor has cost so far. Her outsized spending has bought her some of the nation's best-known GOP strategists and chartered planes offering "white glove service." It's also helped her target traditionally Democratic voters.

In Connecticut, footage of stage explosions and wrestlers flying through the air has filled the TV airwaves in ads for former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon, who has said she's willing to spend up to $50 million of her own money in her bid to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd.

Two former corporate chiefs – one a Republican and one a Democrat – quickly took leads from establishment candidates in Florida despite jumping in late in high-profile races.

Rick Scott, a former health care CEO, is leading in GOP gubernatorial primary polls after spending more than $25 million of his own money for a string of TV ads touting himself as a job creator.

Billionaire Jeff Greene, a Democrat, filed to run for Senate on the final day to qualify. So far he has spent more than $6 million of his fortune, mostly on TV ads attacking his opponent in the primary, four-term Rep. Kendrick Meek, as a career politician.

In Michigan, Rick Snyder, a venture capitalist and former president of computer maker Gateway Inc., spent $6 million, much of it on TV ads touting himself as "one tough nerd," to win the Republican nomination for governor last week over the state's attorney general and a veteran congressman.

The candidates' ability to shun traditional political infrastructure and donor bases is a common theme for this year's crop of political neophytes. They spend freely to promote themselves as outsiders who aren't beholden to special interests.

But while their bank accounts free them from the arduous task of dialing for dollars, voters are often skeptical of self-made political newcomers, said Darry Sragow, who managed Democrat Al Checchi's unsuccessful primary campaign for California governor in 1998. The Northwest Airlines mogul spent $39 million of his own money on the race.

"You need to overcome the presumption that you made a lot of money in business, you're bored, you have a big ego and now you have to find something else to keep you busy," Sragow said.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg holds the U.S. record for self-financing, spending $108 million, or about $185 per vote, to win a third term last year. He did not take donations.

The candidates' wealth can also be a liability, particularly it they have ties to the corporate boardroom at a time when recession-weary voters are angry over bank bailouts and soaring CEO salaries.

Greene, the Florida Senate candidate, has been hammered by an opponent who says he profited from others' misery by investing in speculative housing ventures that catapulted him to billionaire status when the housing bubble burst.

Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, Scott's GOP Senate primary opponent, constantly reminds voters that Scott headed a for-profit hospital chain, Columbia/HCA, when it paid $1.7 billion to settle claims of Medicare fraud. He left the company with a severance package worth millions in cash and stock.

In California, Whitman's millionaire primary rival attacked her for her ties to Goldman Sachs, which paid her $475,000 to serve on its board. She left in 2002 when questions were raised about whether Goldman gave her preferential access to stocks in a practice that is now banned.

Carly Fiorina, the former Hewlett-Packard chief executive who lent her campaign $5.5 million to win the GOP primary to challenge Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer in California, was fired from HP in 2005 and walked away with a $21 million severance package, even as the company's stock price plummeted. Her opponents have used her corporate record against her.

But money allows candidates to try innovative tactics others can't afford.

In New Hampshire, Senate candidate Jim Bender used some of his $1.5 million in personal campaign spending to sponsor a concert with an "American Idol" contestant to attract attention to his lagging Republican primary campaign. His opponent, Bill Binnie, also has given his campaign $3.5 million of his estimated $400 million fortune, flooding the airwaves in his race against former Attorney General Kelly Ayotte.

Whitman, whose wealth was estimated at $1.3 billion by Forbes magazine last year, used in-depth microtargeting of voters in her primary race. Recently she responded to attacks from California's powerful nurses union by buying a list of registered nurses and sending mailers to some calling out their own union leaders.

During her primary race, Fiorina spent some of her campaign cash on a bizarre series of online ads featuring "demon sheep" and a DVD movie in which Boxer morphed into a blimp over Washington, D.C.

While it might be a stretch for millionaires and billionaires to call themselves outsiders, many are clearly trying to ride what they hope will be voter discontent with politicians.

On election night in the California primary, Whitman immediately linked her candidacy to that of Fiorina, although she had rarely before mentioned their shared history working on Sen. John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.

"Career politicians in Sacramento and Washington be warned: You now face your worst nightmare – two businesswomen from the real world who know how to create jobs, balance budgets and get things done," she said.

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott in Washington, Brendan Farrington in Tallahassee, Fla., and Susan Haigh in Hartford, Conn., contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects spelling to Bender)

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the midst of one of the worst recessions in decades, a host of former corporate leaders are spending millions in their quest for elective office, using their personal wea...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In the midst of one of the worst recessions in decades, a host of former corporate leaders are spending millions in their quest for elective office, using their personal wea...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PtownBen
08:37 AM on 08/13/2010
Bill Binnie in NH is a joke, this guy is extremely rich, used to spend his time racing cars in Europe. He lately came up with add campaign targeting English as the language for immigrants as per this headline "Republican Senate candidate Bill Binnie unveiled a new ad this week in which he proclaims he will insist all immigrants speak English if he's elected." This is OK, Except that I personally know his French Property manager, who he brought from France to work on his Rye NH property, the guy didn't speak a lick of English, and I was asked to take him to the DMV to help him get his Driver’s License as a "Translator"/ I answered all the questions for him. Another Hypocrite Republican.
02:06 PM on 08/10/2010
The American way,,,,,,get rich and buy your way into office. Will campaign laws ever be changed so the everyday Joe can run for office and have a fighting chance of winning? I doubt it. Take a look at our congress now....lawyers, doctors, ex CEO's, and other elite or wealthy individuals. Am I jealous, No, just ticked off that they think they have all the answers, when in reality most of their ideas remain the same year and year out with no visions for the future, except to get elected or re-elected.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:44 AM on 08/21/2010
Google George Carlin the American Dream. It say's it all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bibulus
On my way back from Hawaii with the long-form bio
01:56 PM on 08/10/2010
Folks who marvel at Meg Antoinette's spending for a job with such 'menial' pay are not looking at the big picture.

The Governors Mansion in Sacramento is THE best political diving board for national politics in the land (Nixon, Reagan). Her BFF Mitt Romney needs a woman as a foil to the mama grizzly. What better (Mormon) foil to the social climbing half-wit from Wassilla than Uber-Wealthy and educated Megan? Perfect VP ticket to crush the Newts, Sarahs, and Huckabees. How much money will they have between the two of them in '12? We ain't seen nothin' yet when it comes to personal campaign spending...
01:39 PM on 08/10/2010
CEOs trying to buy public offices. That’s what it’s all about, them, not the people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emrogers
What could possibly go wrong?
12:57 PM on 08/10/2010
I don't know who has the biggest ego or who would do the best job - but Jeff Green gotta be the nu.tti.est. Mike Tyson was his Best Man. I mean seriously Jeff.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sloreader
writ this down
12:41 PM on 08/10/2010
Full-time jobs offshore and part-time jobs in people's basements are not what most people trying to provide for their families are looking for.
08:44 PM on 08/09/2010
It's all an ego trip.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Valentine
Retired SEIU Member
08:04 PM on 08/09/2010
ego
g
o

A double dose.
06:51 PM on 08/09/2010
Really smart politicians!! NOT!! Spend $91 million for a $200,000.00 a year job. Sure ya want these folks running the states?
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AudiGuy
There's something beyond one's self
07:25 PM on 08/09/2010
The voters in the states in question should be wondering why? Not even the most narcissistic person would spend this level of money because of the "people".
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
brt929
11:49 AM on 08/10/2010
It doesn't matter. The people that these people target, are intellectually lazy and not independent thinkers. That's what these "candidates" are counting on.
06:49 PM on 08/09/2010
Wow, all that money sure could have helped a lot of people, and maybe put a little dent in the deficit!! But I guess it's more important to try to rule the world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
plaidsportcoat
05:30 PM on 08/09/2010
Money buys a lot of people, but not everyone. And sometimes, not enough.

*hope, hope*
05:07 PM on 08/09/2010
Here in California, Whitman is showing her lack of Integrity spending $90 Million of her wealth to buy votes for a governorship that pays chump change. Whitman could be a better steward of that wealth and fund diversity outreach, educational initiatives, homeless housing, immigration solutions, etc. Whitman is not content with what she has and craves political power. Such a shame.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
hypnotoad72
Freedom = real democracy = living wages
07:08 PM on 08/09/2010
Fanned.

Keep spreading the word. It sounds like anyone voting for her is blind or foolish or thinks they will be rewarded in return.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
My little dog — a heartbeat at my feet ^..^
11:28 AM on 08/10/2010
Fan #8 from a fellow Californian. No way I'm voting for Whitman or Fiorina. Yech. Spending that kind of personal wealth for the governorship is obscene.

And you are so right, it could have been spent in such helpful ways if one was really concerned about helping people, which Whitman clearly is not. I can't believe Californians will fall for it. Brown's frugality, on the other hand, greatly appeals to me. Go Brown & Boxer! ☮
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
brt929
11:53 AM on 08/10/2010
The idea of Fiorina winning is the most obscene. She almost destroyed HP, she was named one of the 10 worst CEOs and we are supposed to reward her with a
Senator's seat?

At least I know there isn't one ex or current HP employee that will vote for her.
05:07 PM on 08/09/2010
When buying polititians is not enough you gotta do it yourself.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keepemhonest
04:42 PM on 08/09/2010
Um.... let me guess - the Teabaggers think electing Corporate CEO's will help the working man ... yeah ... yeah ...sure ... sure

I suppose I don't expect anything less from the Teabaggers since, after all, Teabaggers chant,
"Leave our Constitution alone!"
.... while at the very same time teabaggers chant:
"REPEAL the 14th Amendment!"
04:26 PM on 08/09/2010
This makes me sick. If you are wealthy you can buy a seat in the Senate or Congress, screw the Average American Citizen.