EnWiki.NET - Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate
YPINFO        ZPYJ
TODAY:Thu, 08 Jan 2009       

Forbes, Steve Britannica Student Article

User Click:33

(born 1947), U.S. publisher and political figure. When his father, Malcolm, died in 1990, Steve Forbes inherited responsibility for his family's huge publishing empire. He became president and chief executive officer of Forbes, Inc., editor in chief of Forbes, a business magazine, and publisher of American Heritage magazine as well as a chain of suburban weekly newspapers. Before Sept. 22, 1995, when he announced that he would seek the Republican nomination for president of the United States, he had never run for any public office.

Malcolm Stevenson Forbes, Jr., was born on July 18, 1947, in Morristown, N.J. His father was the colorful millionaire Malcolm Forbes, who motorcycled and set world hot-air balloon records and who built the Forbes publishing empire. Steve's gentle style was a contrast to his father's flamboyance. He majored in history at Princeton University and was founding editor of a student magazine, Business Today. He graduated in 1970 and married Sabina Beekman the following year. They had five children.

Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush appointed Forbes to chair the board that oversaw Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, which broadcast United States messages into the Communist countries of Eastern Europe. During Forbes's term in office, from 1985 until 1993, the Communist governments of those countries collapsed. In December 1993 Forbes was elected chairman of Empower America, a political organization started by Republicans Jack Kemp, Bill Bennett, and Jeanne Kirkpatrick.

After Kemp announced in January 1995 that he would not run for president, friends encouraged Forbes to become a candidate. In September Forbes became the 12th declared Republican contender. He was wealthy enough to finance his campaign personally and said he would not accept federal funds. He argued that his experience in business and his lack of experience in politics would let him make sweeping changes in government. Within weeks, Forbes rose to second place among Republican contenders on several state and national surveys.

Forbes's platform centered on the “flat tax,” which would eliminate most deductions, offer large personal exemptions, and tax the balance of corporate or personal income at 17 percent. He argued that abolishing the tax code would eliminate most opportunities for influence by lobbyists and special interests. Forbes also advocated a return to the gold standard. His positions on social issues were moderate compared to those of most candidates for the 1996 Republican presidential nomination.