Dumping Uber’s CEO: A Lesson for GOP?

Robert Urbanek

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Nov 9, 2019
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Three years after forcing the resignation of their self-described “disrupter” and “asshole” leader, Uber went on to win a major battle when California voters in 2020 approved a ballot measure to preserve Uber drivers and similar gig workers as independent contractors, not employees.

The controversial Uber CEO Travis Kalanick was not as indispensable as he thought he was. Can Republican voters treat Trump the same way?

Arguably, Kalanick’s ruthless and unethical measures were essential to Uber’s success, but the excesses piled up over the years: a toxic environment for female workers, who Kalanick dubbed “Boober,” indifference to crimes committed by and against drivers, unwinnable battles against Apple and Google, and a “delete Uber” wave that came after Uber seemed to side against striking New York cab drivers.

The story of Kalanick’s rise and fall was documented in the 2022 season of the Showtime series Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, which starred Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Kalanick and featured a barely recognizable Uma Thurman as Arianna Huffington, an unlikely mentor who persuades Kalanick to resign. There was no similar figure to “talk down” Donald Trump from his doomed effort to stay President after the 2020 election.

At one point in the show Kalanick admires the loyalty tests Trump demanded of his inner circle but he couldn’t force similar loyalty: Kalanick’s longtime colleagues turned against him in his fight to retain his position.

SuperPumped.jpg
 
Arianna Huffington should offer Trump the same mentoring and let us know how that goes for her.

This is the second thread I've seen trying to find an analogy between Trump and an off-the-rails corporate CEO. Here is why such a comparison could never be valid:

In order for it to be a valid analogy, the CEO who replaced Travis Kalanick would have had to have done so through unlawfully changing the way CEOs are elected, rather than convincing the stockholders. He then would have had to have turned the Loss Prevention department of the corporation to endlessly investigating Kalanick, instead of maintaining the security of the corporation.
 
Three years after forcing the resignation of their self-described “disrupter” and “asshole” leader, Uber went on to win a major battle when California voters in 2020 approved a ballot measure to preserve Uber drivers and similar gig workers as independent contractors, not employees.

The controversial Uber CEO Travis Kalanick was not as indispensable as he thought he was. Can Republican voters treat Trump the same way?

Arguably, Kalanick’s ruthless and unethical measures were essential to Uber’s success, but the excesses piled up over the years: a toxic environment for female workers, who Kalanick dubbed “Boober,” indifference to crimes committed by and against drivers, unwinnable battles against Apple and Google, and a “delete Uber” wave that came after Uber seemed to side against striking New York cab drivers.

The story of Kalanick’s rise and fall was documented in the 2022 season of the Showtime series Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, which starred Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Kalanick and featured a barely recognizable Uma Thurman as Arianna Huffington, an unlikely mentor who persuades Kalanick to resign. There was no similar figure to “talk down” Donald Trump from his doomed effort to stay President after the 2020 election.

At one point in the show Kalanick admires the loyalty tests Trump demanded of his inner circle but he couldn’t force similar loyalty: Kalanick’s longtime colleagues turned against him in his fight to retain his position.

View attachment 816802
Not the same because nobody ever made worship of Travis Kalanick their entire personality the way MAGA does with Trump
 

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