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Arianna Huffington (born July 15, 1950) is an author and nationally
syndicated columnist. She describes herself as a "former right-winger who has
evolved into a compassionate and progressive populist."
She was born in Greece as Ariadne Stassinopoulos, the daughter of Constantine (a
journalist and management consultant) and Elli (Georgiadis) Stassinopoulos. She
moved to England at the age of sixteen, and attended Girton College at Cambridge
University where she was President of the Cambridge Union Society in 1971 and
graduated with a MA in Economics in 1972.
After graduation she moved to London, working as a columnist, critic, and
appearing on a number of TV shows. For much of this time she lived with literary
critic Bernard Levin, who she had met while the two were panellists on TV show
Face the Music. She left Levin in 1980 to move to the US (partly, she later
said, because he refused to marry her). On his death in 2004 she called Levin
"The big love of my life".
She met Michael Huffington at a 1985 party hosted by Ann Getty in San Francisco.
She married him in 1986. She then moved to Washington, when Michael got a DoD
appointment. She divorced Michael in 1997, after he narrowly lost the 1994 race
for the U.S. Senate seat from California to Dianne Feinstein. In a 1999 Esquire
article by David Brock, Michael Huffington claimed that Arianna "entered the
marriage ... with full knowledge of his sexual interests in men."
In 2000, she instigated the 'Shadow Conventions', which appeared at the
Republican National Convention in Philadelphia and the Democratic National
Convention in Los Angeles. To one of the attendees at the Shadow Convention in
Philadelphia, State Rep. Mark B. Cohen of Philadelphia, "the subjects of the
Shadow Convention--campaign finance reform, reform of America's drug laws,
fighting the causes of poverty, reducing corporate influence on the political
process--showed that she had come a long way from her days as a Gingrich backer
while remaining a registered Republican."
Arianna Huffington heads The Detroit Project, a pressure group lobbying
automakers to start producing "cars that will end our dependence on foreign
oil". The Project's 2003 TV ads, which equated driving sport utility vehicles to
funding terrorism, proved to be particularly controversial, with some stations
refusing to run them. Huffington herself drives a gas-electric hybrid car, the
Toyota Prius.
Huffington was an independent candidate to replace California governor Gray
Davis in the 2003 recall election. She described her candidacy against
front-runner Arnold Schwarzenegger as "the hybrid versus the Hummer," making
reference to Schwarzenegger's ownership of that vehicle. She dropped out of the
race on September 30, 2003, to try to get the recall defeated saying it was the
only way to prevent Schwarzenegger from becoming Governor. "I'm pulling out, and
I'm going to concentrate every ounce of time and energy over the next week
working to defeat the recall because I realize now that's the only way to defeat
Arnold Schwarzenegger," she said. Huffington's name still appeared on the ballot
and she placed 5th in a field of 135 candidates, capturing 0.6% of the votes.
Although she does not normally support Democrats, in an appearance on Jon
Stewart's Daily Show, she announced her endorsement of John Kerry on the
rationale that "When your house is burning down, you don't worry about the
remodeling." In recent years, she has moved closer to the Democratic Party. She
was a panel speaker during the 2005 California Democratic Party State Convention
held in Los Angeles
Arianna Huffington has written several books including:
The Female Woman (1973) (ISBN 0706700988)
After Reason (1978) (ISBN 0812824652)
The Gods of Greece (1993) (ISBN 087113554X)
Maria Callas (1993) (ISBN 0815412282)
The Fourth Instinct (1994) (ISBN 0743261631)
Picasso: Creator and Destroyer (1996) (ISBN 0671454463)
Greetings from the Lincoln Bedroom (1998) (ISBN 0517396998)
How to Overthrow the Government (2000) (ISBN 0060988312)
Pigs at the Trough (2003) (ISBN 1400047714)
Fanatics & Fools (2004) (ISBN 1401352138)
She does write for the Huffington Post of course and The Progressive Populist.
Huffington is co-host of the nationally syndicated public radio program Left,
Right and Center. She was originally introduced by the moderator as occupying
the chair "from the right," but is now described as "coming from the fourth
dimension of political time and space."
Credit:
en.wikipedia.org
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