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That may be the case for gender as well. In some cases, Tuesday's victors have been climbing the political ladder for years and decided to seize the opportunity for higher office as voters crave change. Whitman, a former chief executive of eBay, faces former Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., who is seeking a return to the office he left in 1983. Fiorina, a former Hewlett-Packard CEO, faces Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer, who was elected to the Senate in the class of 1992. The Republican women are running as first-time candidates against veteran politicians and casting themselves as outsiders in a year when voters despise insiders. "Career politicians in Sacramento and Washington, D.C., 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," Whitman said. Nodding to women backers, she added: "This gal is on a mission. And I am all in." It was the first time the California Republican Party has put a woman -- much less two
-- at the top of its ticket. Responding to Fiorina's triumph, EMILY's List, which backs female candidates who support abortions rights, launched a website supportive of Boxer, calling her "a fierce advocate for protecting women's freedom and liberty." In South Carolina, Haley's rise was stunning given the state's poor record of electing women. It ranks 50th in the nation for the percentage of women in the state legislature, and there are no women in South Carolina's Senate, the country's only all-male chamber. Haley, who is of Indian descent, came from behind in polls to outpace three male rivals but, without a majority of votes, heads into a June 22 runoff. Her rival, Rep. Gresham Barrett, rolled out a TV ad Wednesday that called him "a Christian family man who won't embarrass us"
-- a jab at both Haley's Sikh-turned-Methodist religion and the claims of infidelity that she denies. Palin had endorsed Fiorina and Haley, a lift to their candidacies. If these women prevail in November, year of the woman will be the oft-repeated phrase. Just don't tell Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md. "Calling 1992 the Year of the Woman makes it sound like the Year of the Caribou or the Year of the Asparagus. We're not a fad, a fancy, or a year," she once said.
[Associated
Press;
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