Christine Todd Whitman | |
|---|---|
Official portrait, 2001 | |
| 9thAdministrator of the Environmental Protection Agency | |
| In office January 31, 2001 – June 27, 2003 | |
| President | George W. Bush |
| Preceded by | Carol Browner |
| Succeeded by | Mike Leavitt |
| 50thGovernor of New Jersey | |
| In office January 18, 1994 – January 31, 2001 | |
| Preceded by | James Florio |
| Succeeded by | Donald DiFrancesco |
| President of theNew Jersey Board of Public Utilities | |
| In office February 10, 1988 – January 16, 1990 | |
| Preceded by | Barbara A. Curran |
| Succeeded by | Scott Weiner |
| Member of theSomerset CountyBoard of Chosen Freeholders | |
| In office January 1, 1983 – January 29, 1988 | |
| Preceded by | Doris Dealaman |
| Succeeded by | Kip Bateman |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Christine Temple Todd (1946-09-26)September 26, 1946 (age 79) New York City,New York, U.S. |
| Party | Republican (before 2022) Forward (2022–present) |
| Spouse | |
| Children | Kate |
| Relatives | Webster B. Todd (father) |
| Education | Wheaton College (BA) |
Christine Temple Whitman (née Todd; born September 26, 1946) is an American politician and author who served as the 50thgovernor of New Jersey from 1994 to 2001 and asAdministrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under PresidentGeorge W. Bush from 2001 to 2003. Whitman was New Jersey's firstfemale governor.[a]
Born in New York City to aRepublican political family, Whitman graduated fromWheaton College in 1968 and began her political career in theNixon administration'sOffice of Economic Opportunity. After coming within three percentage points of unseating U.S. SenatorBill Bradley in 1990, she ran for governor ofNew Jersey, defeating Democratic incumbentJim Florio. A self-describedRockefeller Republican, Whitman defeated DemocratJim McGreevey to win re-election in 1997. She remained governor until stepping down in 2001 to become Administrator of theEnvironmental Protection Agency, where she served until 2003. During her tenure at the EPA, Whitman was noted for having assured the public that the air in lower Manhattan was safe to breathe following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001; she apologized in 2016 for having made this statement.
In 2022, Whitman joined former Democratic presidential candidateAndrew Yang to form theForward Party, a centristthird party.
Christine Todd Whitman was born Christine Temple Todd in New York City on September 26, 1946. Her mother was Eleanor Prentice Todd (née Schley) and her father businessmanWebster B. Todd.[2] Both the Todds and the Schleys were wealthy and prominent New Jersey political families.[3] The Schleys were among the first New Yorkers to move to the area that later becameFar Hills, New Jersey, which became a popular suburb for wealthy, moderate Republicans.[3] Webster B. Todd amassed a fortune as a building contractor on projects includingRockefeller Center andRadio City Music Hall. He used his wealth to donate to Republican politicians, becoming an advisor toDwight D. Eisenhower and chairing theNew Jersey Republican State Committee twice.[4][5] Eleanor Prentice Todd served as a Republican national committeewoman, led the New Jersey Federation of Republican Women,[4] and served as vice chair of the Republican National Committee.[5] Eleanor Prentice Todd's political activity caused a newspaper to speculate that she could be a viable candidate for governor, although she never chose to run for office.[3]
Christine Todd grew up on her family's farm, Pontefract, inOldwick, New Jersey.[6][3] She had three older siblings, including brothers Webster and Danny.[3][4] At the age of nine, she attended the1956 Republican National Convention and met President Eisenhower.[7] As a child, Todd attendedFar Hills Country Day School before being sent to boarding school atFoxcroft in Virginia.[3][8] Todd disliked being so far away from home and after a year, she transferred to theChapin School inManhattan, allowing her to return home on the weekends.[3]
After graduating fromWheaton College in 1968 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in government, Todd worked forNelson Rockefeller's presidential campaign.[6][5]
Christine Todd married John Whitman in 1974.[9] Christine Todd Whitman worked for theOffice of Economic Opportunity and theRepublican National Committee.[10]
Whitman served on theboard of trustees of Somerset County College (later renamedRaritan Valley Community College).[7] Elected to two terms on the Somerset CountyBoard of Chosen Freeholders, she served for five-and-one-half years beginning in 1983.[7] From 1988 to 1990, during the tenure of Gov.Thomas Kean, she served as president of theNew Jersey Board of Public Utilities.[3][7]
In1990, Whitman ran for theU.S. Senate againstDemocratic incumbentBill Bradley, losing a close election.[11] She was considered an underdog against the popular Bradley, but performed better than expected despite being outspent 12-to-one.[7] Her performance endeared her to the party base and made her the leading public advocate of the anti-tax cause.[12]
Whitman continued to build her profile by founding apolitical action committee, the Committee for an Affordable New Jersey, through which she campaigned for Republican candidates in the 1991 midterm elections.[13] Whitman took on a full campaign speaking schedule through October 1992.[14]
In 1993, Whitman helped to found theCommittee for Responsible Government, an advocacy group espousing moderate positions in the Republican Party.[citation needed] In 1997, the group renamed itself theRepublican Leadership Council.[15]


After winning a Republican primary,[16] Whitman ran against incumbentJames Florio for governor of New Jersey inthe 1993 general election. Whitman won the election by aplurality, defeating Florio by one percentage point[17] to become the firstfemale governor in New Jersey history. As of 2025[update], she is first woman to have served as governor of New Jersey, with Mikie Sherrill serving as the second female governor of New Jersey.[18]
Charges of suppression of minority votes were raised during Whitman's 1993 campaign.[19] Two days after the election,Ed Rollins, Whitman's campaign manager, bragged about having spent $500,000 to suppress the black vote.[3] Whitman denied Rollins's claim and demanded an apology and a retraction.[20] An investigation into Rollins's claim found no wrongdoing.[3]
Whitman was re-elected in 1997, narrowly defeating DemocratJim McGreevey, the mayor ofWoodbridge Township. Whitman again prevailed by a one-point margin and received a plurality of the votes.[21]Murray Sabrin, a college professor who ran as aLibertarian candidate, finished third with five percent of the vote.[21]
During her tenure, Whitman was described as aRockefeller Republican,[22][23] as aliberal Republican,[24] and as amoderate Republican.[25][26] In 1995, theWashington Post called Whitman "an East Coast blue blood, a woman who grew up in the horse country of New Jersey and attended some of the nation's most exclusive private schools". ThePost added, "At a time when the party's base has moved to the South, the West, the working class and the religious right, Whitman is a throwback with roots in the patrician Republican politics of three and four decades ago". Whitman "freely calls herself a pro-choice, Rockefeller Republican".[3]
Whitman pledged during the 1993 campaign that she would lower state taxes by 10% a year for three years. Once in office, she kept the campaign promise, and lowered income taxes.[27] The decline in the tax burden made it likely that the issue of tax revenue shortfall would be addressed later. Jim Saxton, in a report to the federal congress, argued that New Jersey's income tax cuts improved "the well-being of the New Jersey family", and would not lead to an increase in property taxes.[28][better source needed]
In 1995, Whitman was criticized for saying that young African-American males sometimes played a game known asjewels in the crown, which she claimed had as its intent having as many children as possible out of wedlock. Whitman subsequently apologized and voiced her opposition to attempts by Congressional Republicans to bar unwed teenage mothers from receiving welfare payments.[29]
Also in 1995, the Republican Party selected Whitman to deliver the party's State of the Union response.[3] She became the first woman to deliver a State of the Union response by herself; her speech was also the first State of the Union response given to a live audience.[30]
In 1996, Whitman rejected a recommendation from the Governor's Council on AIDS to spend tax money on a needle exchange to reduce incidence of HIV infections.[31][32]
In 1997, Whitman repealed the one percentage-point increase to the state sales tax that her predecessor Governor Florio had imposed, reducing the rate from 7% to 6%, instituted education reforms, and removed excise taxes onprofessional wrestling, which led theWorld Wrestling Federation to resume events in New Jersey. As a result, she was made honoraryWWF Champion and awarded a replica belt byGorilla Monsoon at that year'sSummerSlam pay-per-view.[citation needed]
In 1999, Whitman vetoed a ban onpartial birth abortion. Her veto wasoverridden,[33] but the statute was subsequently declared unconstitutional by the judiciary.[34]
In 1999, Whitman fired Colonel Carl A. Williams, head of the New Jersey State Police, after he was quoted as saying that cocaine and marijuana traffickers were often members of minority groups, while the methamphetamine trade was controlled primarily by white biker gangs.[35]
When Democratic SenatorFrank Lautenberg announced that he would not seek re-election in 2000, Whitman considered running for U.S. Senate,[36] but ultimately decided against it.[37]
Whitman resigned from office on January 31, 2001, to become administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency.[38]
| The Whitman Cabinet[39] | ||
|---|---|---|
| Office | Name | Term |
| Governor | Christine Todd Whitman | January 18, 1994 – January 31, 2001 |
| Adjutant General | Major General Vito Morgano | April 9, 1990 – April 4, 1994 |
| Major General Paul Glazar | April 4, 1994 – January 15, 2002 | |
| Secretary of Agriculture | Arthur R. Brown Jr. | July 1, 1982 – January 15, 2002 |
| Attorney General | Deborah Poritz | January 18, 1994 – July 10, 1996 |
| Peter Verniero | July 10, 1996 – May 15, 1999 | |
| Paul Zoubek | May 15, 1999 – June 3, 1999 (acting) | |
| John Farmer Jr. | June 3, 1999 – January 15, 2002 | |
| Commissioner of Banking and Insurance | Elizabeth Randall | March 10, 1994 – August 24, 1998 |
| Jaynee LaVecchia | August 24, 1998 – January 18, 2000 | |
| Karen Suter | January 18, 2000 – October 3, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Commerce | Gualberto Medina | January 31, 1994 – August 28, 1998 |
| Commissioner of Community Affairs | Harriet E. Derman | February 7, 1994 – May 1, 1996 |
| Jane Kenny | May 1, 1996 – November 18, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Corrections | William H. Fauver | January 18, 1978 – December 31, 1997 |
| Gary Hilton | January 1, 1998 – March 2, 1998 (acting) | |
| John Terhune | March 3, 1998 – January 1, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Education | Leo Klagholz | February 23, 1994 – April 4, 1999 |
| David C. Hespe | April 5, 1999 – February 26, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Environmental Protection | Robert C. Shinn Jr. | February 7, 1994 – January 15, 2002 |
| Commissioner of Health and Senior Services | Len Fishman | January 23, 1994 – March 1999 |
| Christine Grant | June 21, 1999 – August 10, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Human Services | William Waldman | December 1, 1992 – June 30, 1998 |
| Michele (Kent) Guhl | July 1, 1998 – February 1, 2001 | |
| Commissioner of Insurance | Andrew Karpinski | July 6, 1994 – October 12, 1995 |
| Elizabeth Randall | October 13, 1995 – June 27, 1996 | |
| Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development | Peter Calderone | January 18, 1994 – January 1997 |
| Melvin Gelade | January 27, 1997 – June 2000 | |
| Mark Boyd | June 26, 2000 – January 15, 2002 | |
| Personnel Commissioner | Linda Anselmini | March 10, 1994 – January 20, 1998 |
| Janice Mitchell Mintz | February 4, 1998 – January 15, 2002 | |
| Secretary of State | Lonna Hooks | January 18, 1994 – June 30, 1998 |
| Carol Cronheim | July 1, 1998 – January 11, 1999 (acting) | |
| DeForest Soaries | January 12, 1999 – January 15, 2002 | |
| Commissioner of Transportation | Frank Wilson | April 6, 1994 – December 31, 1996 |
| John Haley, Jr. | January 6, 1997 – December 7, 1998 | |
| James Weinstein | December 7, 1998 – January 15, 2002 | |
| State Treasurer | Brian Clymer | January 24, 1994 – June 30, 1997 |
| James DiEleuterio | July 1, 1997 – August 13, 1999 | |
| Roland Machold | August 30, 1999 – February 1, 2001 | |
Whitman was mentioned as a potential Republican vice presidential candidate in 1996.[40][3]
According toThe New York Times, Whitman "seemed to be on a short list of vice presidential candidates in 2000, right up until July 8, 2000 – days before the opening of the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia – when a four-year-old photograph surfaced showing an oddly smiling Governor Whitman, surrounded by law enforcement agents, frisking a black drug suspect on a street in Camden".[41] In 1996, Whitman had joined aNew Jersey State Police patrol inCamden, New Jersey. During the patrol, the officers stopped a 16-year-old African American male named Sherron Rolax and frisked him. The police did not find any contraband on Rolax's person, but Whitman frisked the youth as well. A state trooper photographed the act. In 2000, the image of the smiling governor frisking Rolax was published in newspapers statewide, drawing criticism fromcivil rights leaders who saw the incident as a violation of Rolax's civil rights and an endorsement of racial profiling by Whitman (especially since Rolax was not arrested or charged). Whitman later told the press that she regretted the incident, and pointed to her efforts in 1999 to oppose the New Jersey State Police force's racial profiling practices.[42][43]
Ultimately, then-Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush selectedDick Cheney as his running mate in the 2000 presidential election.

Whitman was appointed by President George W. Bush as Administrator of theUnited States Environmental Protection Agency, taking office on January 31, 2001.[44][45]
In the final weeks of theClinton administration in January 2001, the administration ratified a new drinking water standard of 0.01 mg/L (10 parts per billion, or ppb) ofarsenic, to take effect in January 2006. The old drinking water standard of 0.05 mg/L (equal to 50 ppb) arsenic had been in effect since 1942, and the EPA, since the late 1980s, had weighed the pros and cons of lowering themaximum contaminant level (MCL) of arsenic.[46] The incoming Bush administration suspended themidnight regulation, but after months of research, the EPA approved the new 10 ppb arsenic standard to take effect in January 2006 as initially planned.[47]
In 2001, the EPA produced a report detailing the expected effects ofglobal warming in each state in the country. President Bush dismissed the report as the work of "the bureaucracy."[48]
After theSeptember 11 attacks in New York City, she appeared there twice to inform New Yorkers that the toxins released by the attacks posed no threat to their health.[49] On September 18, the EPA released a report in which Whitman said, "Given the scope of the tragedy from last week, I am glad to reassure the people of New York and Washington, D.C. that their air is safe to breathe and their water is safe to drink." She also said, "The concentrations are such that they don't pose a health hazard...We're going to make sure everybody is safe."[50]
However, a 2003 report by the EPA'sInspector General determined that the assurance was misleading, because the EPA "did not have sufficient data and analyses" to justify it.[51]A July 2003 report from the EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response provided extensive documentation supporting many of the inspector general's conclusions.[52] The report further found that the White House had "convinced EPA to add reassuring statements and delete cautionary ones" by having theNational Security Council control EPA communications after the September 11 attacks.[53] On June 27, 2003, after having several public conflicts with the Bush administration, Whitman resigned.[54][55]
In December 2006, legal proceedings began on the responsibility of government officials in the aftermath of theSeptember 11, 2001 attacks. Whitman was among the defendants. The plaintiffs alleged that Whitman was at fault for saying that thedowntown New York air was safe in the aftermath of the attacks.[56]
On April 20, 2007, a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Whitman and other EPA officials could not be held liable for saying that the air was safe to breathe. The panel "reasoned that the government's interest in returning New York to normalcy following the attacks should protect it from lawsuits alleging that the government made false statements about air quality."[57]
In an interview in 2007, Whitman stated that Vice President Dick Cheney's insistence on easing air pollution controls, not the personal reasons she cited at the time, led to her resignation.[58] At the time, Cheney pushed the EPA to institute a new rule allowing power plants to make major alterations without installing costly new pollution controls.[58] Whitman stepped down in protest against such demand by the White House, she said.[58] She decided that because she did not agree with the rule, she would not be able to defend it if it were to be challenged in a legal action.[58] The federal court eventually overturned the rule on the ground that it violated the Clean Air Act.[58]
In 2016, Whitman apologized for the first time for her declaration a week after 9/11 that the air in lower Manhattan was safe to breathe.[59]
| External audio | |
|---|---|



In early 2005, Whitman released a book entitledIt's My Party, Too: Taking Back the Republican Party... And Bringing the Country Together Again in which she criticized the policies of theGeorge W. Bush administration and its electoral strategy:
The defining feature of the conservative viewpoint is a faith in the ability, and a respect for the right, of individuals to make their own decisions – economic, social, and spiritual – about their lives. The true conservative understands that government's track record in respecting individual rights is poor when it dictates individual choices.[61]
The last chapter of that book, entitled "A Time for Radical Moderates", speaks toradical centrists across the political spectrum.[62] The same year as her book was released, Whitman formed apolitical action committee called It's My Party Too (IMP-PAC), to assist electoral campaigns of moderate Republicans at all levels of government.[63] After the2006 midterm elections, IMP-PAC was merged into RLC-PAC, theRepublican Leadership Council's PAC.[64]
Whitman "is co-founder and president of The Whitman Strategy Group, a consulting firm specializing in government relations, and environmental and energy issues".[7]
In 2011, Whitman was named to the board ofAmericans Elect.[65]
In February 2013, Whitman supported legal recognition of same-sex marriage in an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court.[66]
As of 2015, Whitman is a member of the ReFormers Caucus ofIssue One.[67][better source needed] The group, which included 100 other former elected officials advocated for campaign finance reform.[68]
In 2016, Whitman was named the co-chair of the Joint Ocean Commission Initiative.[69][better source needed]
On February 26, 2016, she endorsedJohn Kasich in hisbid seeking the GOP nomination for presidential candidate.[70] She said thatDonald Trump was using "fascist" tactics in his campaign and afterChris Christie's endorsement of Trump said that, in the case of a Trump nomination by the GOP, she would vote forHillary Clinton.[71][72] In 2018, Whitman wrote an op-ed calling Trump unfit for office and urging other Republicans to pressure him to step down.[73]
In February 2020, Whitman endorsed former Massachusetts GovernorBill Weld for president in theRepublican primaries, in which he was challenging incumbent president Donald Trump.[74] Whitman spoke at the2020 Democratic National Convention, endorsing Democratic nomineeJoe Biden over Republican nomineeDonald Trump in the general election.[75][76]
Whitman co-founded the States United Democracy Center in 2021.[77] and, as of 2022, serves as its co-chair.[78] In her States United capacity, she was among the former state officials who submitted testimony to theU.S. House of Representatives Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol, arguing that the attack was part of "a sustained and coordinated effort by the former president and his anti-democracy allies to suppress voting rights, delegitimize free and fair elections, and subvert the will of the voters by overturning election results deemed undesirable to their movement."[79] In July 2022, Whitman was among three former Republican governors who submitted a friend-of-the-court brief to theU.S. Supreme Court, urging the court to uphold provisions of the federalVoting Rights Acts of 1965 that protect minority voters from having their voting power diluted.[80]
In 2022, Whitman joined former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang to create theForward Party, a centrist third party.[81]
Whitman was a senior fellow at theKettering Foundation, an Americannon-partisan research foundation from 2024-2025.[82]
Whitman endorsed Democratic presidential nomineeKamala Harris in 2024.[83] In the2025 New Jersey gubernatorial election, she endorsed Democratic nomineeMikie Sherrill over Republican nomineeJack Ciattarelli.[84]
As of 2008, Whitman served on the board of directors ofTexas Instruments[85][better source needed] andUnited Technologies.[86][better source needed] Whitman is also co-chair of the CASEnergy Coalition,[citation needed] and in 2007, voiced support for a stronger future role ofnuclear power in the United States.[87] Whitman joined the board of theAmerican Security Project in April 2010;[88][better source needed] by 2015, she served as chairperson of its board of directors.[89][better source needed]
At a 1973 inaugural ball for Richard Nixon, Christine had her first date withJohn R. Whitman (1944–2015), an old friend she had met while a student at Chapin.[3][9] The pair married the next year.[9] Whitman was a businessman and an investment banker; he was also the grandson of early 20th-centuryGovernor of New YorkCharles S. Whitman.[90]
While governor, Whitman used Pontefract, the family farm on which she was raised, as her primary residence.[3] Whitman had purchased the property in 1991 following the death of her mother.[3]
John Whitman died on July 2, 2015, at age 71 following a head injury he sustained the previous month.[91] With her late husband, Whitman has two children: daughterKate and son Taylor.[3] Kate Whitman has followed her mother into politics, including an unsuccessful run for the U.S. House of Representatives and having worked as a congressional aide.[92][93] In 2007, Kate Whitman was named executive director of the Republican Leadership Council, her mother's organization which promotes moderate Republicanism.[94] Whitman has seven grandchildren.[9]
Whitman has been a resident ofTewksbury Township, New Jersey.[95]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Bill Bradley (incumbent) | 977,810 | 50.44 | ||
| Republican | Christine Todd Whitman | 918,874 | 47.40 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Christine Todd Whitman | 159,765 | 39.96 | ||
| Republican | W. Cary Edwards | 131,587 | 32.91 | ||
| Republican | James Wallwork | 96,034 | 24.02 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Christine Todd Whitman | 1,236,124 | 49.33 | ||
| Democratic | Jim Florio (incumbent) | 1,210,031 | 48.29 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Christine Todd Whitman (incumbent) | 1,133,394 | 46.87 | ||
| Democratic | Jim McGreevey | 1,107,968 | 45.82 | ||
| Libertarian | Murray Sabrin | 114,172 | 4.72 | ||
{{cite web}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link){{cite web}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)| Party political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Republican nominee forU.S. Senator fromNew Jersey (Class 2) 1990 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Republican nominee forGovernor of New Jersey 1993,1997 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Response to the State of the Union address 1995 | Succeeded by |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Governor of New Jersey 1994–2001 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency 2001–2003 | Succeeded by |
| U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial) | ||
| Preceded byas Former Governor | Order of precedence of the United States | Succeeded byas Former Governor |