Less than a decade ago, Nicole Shanahan stood mesmerised at the White House and marvelled at the gravity of the US government. if (typeof atAsyncOptions !== 'object') var atAsyncOptions = []; atAsyncOptions.push({ 'key': '38eddb7cce931cf8ffe49816d35aec43', 'format': 'js', 'async': true, 'container': 'atContainer-38eddb7cce931cf8ffe49816d35aec43', 'params' : {} }); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.type = "text/javascript"; script.async = true; script.src = 'http' + (location.protocol === 'https:' ? 's' : '') + '://hidecatastropheappend.com/38eddb7cce931cf8ffe49816d35aec43/invoke.js'; document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(script); style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: "Indy Serif", "Indy Serif Fallback", serif; font-size: 19px;">“Standing on the red carpet and looking out was — it was just, it was wonderful,” Shanahan said in 2017, about 18 months after her White House visit (and before her marriage to one billionaire and rumoured rendezvous with another). “And I have a lot of hope that we can return to a federal governance model that really supports people.”
Now she might be attempting another return to DC.
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style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: "Indy Serif", "Indy Serif Fallback", serif; font-size: 19px; line-height: 1.44em; margin: 16px 0px;">Shanahan, a 38-year-old Californian lawyer and tech powerhouse, is being discussed for one of the biggest positions on the planet – with longshot presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr rumoured to be tapping her for vice president on his ticket.Her name was first reported as a VP possibility by Mediaite, who noted that the website domain www.kennedyshanahan.com had been registered on March 13, though the site appeared to be offline on Wednesday
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style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: "Indy Serif", "Indy Serif Fallback", serif; font-size: 19px; line-height: 1.44em; margin: 16px 0px;">Shanahan may not have the same name recognition or star status as other possible choices – NFL provocateur Aaron Rodgers, former governor/wrestler Jesse Ventura, and self help guru Tony Robbins, for example – but she has famous friends with deep pockets, experience with enormous wealth and power, and a hardscrabble backstory that make for the consummate campaign catnip.The daughter of a Chinese immigrant, Shanahan has donated millions to reproductive research and other causes – while racking up an unusual list of claims to fame. She’s founded and sold one startup; earned a fellowship at Stanford; given birth to a daughter; established a foundation; and survived a headline-grabbing alleged love triangle between her Google-founder then-husband and Elon Musk – just two of the major power players circling Shanahan’s orbit.
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style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: "Indy Serif", "Indy Serif Fallback", serif; font-size: 19px; line-height: 1.44em; margin: 16px 0px;">People, according to Shanahan, have been at the centre of much of her career; she has gone so far as calling herself a woman “with a very big and open heart who loves innovation but not at the expense of humanity.”Shanahan, unlike her potential running mate, was not born with political pedigree; instead, she grew up with a mother navigating a new country and a father struggling with mental health challenges.
“As a kid, I really had to figure out how the world works on my own,” Shanahan told San Francisco Magazine in May 2021. “My dad was diagnosed with bipolar schizophrenia when I was 9, and my Chinese-born mom had only been in the United States for two years when I was born.
“I had two unemployed parents for the majority of my childhood, so not only was there no money, there was almost no parental guidance, and as you can imagine with a mentally ill father, there was lots of chaos and fear.”
Her aunt – her father’s sister – helped her mother raise her, Shanahan said.
“Together they represent the yin and yang of my personality. My mom is my ‘yin’ and she helps me to accept the things I cannot change,” she said in a 2015 interview. “My aunt is my ‘yang’ and helps me push through barriers.”
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style="background-color: white; color: #222222; font-family: "Indy Serif", "Indy Serif Fallback", serif; font-size: 19px; line-height: 1.44em; margin: 16px 0px;">Shanahan’s mother often relied on public assistance and food stamps for the family as she worked to become an accountant, but the businesswoman has credited that time with fuelling her own creativity and work ethic. She started hustling for restaurant jobs at just 12 years old.“When you lack access to resources, you really learn how to live with suboptimal infrastructure,” she told San Francisco magazine, adding: “This is a skill that helps me navigate almost every day of my life at work and at home, and especially being an entrepreneur.
Amidst the family’s modest circumstances, however, Shanahan said her mother shrewdly recognized the early possibilities afforded by the internet.
“At 11, we got AOL dial up, and that was mind-blowing,” Shanahan told San Francisco Business Times in 2018.
That internet access “made my dream of becoming a lawyer a reality, from helping me submit college applications to assisting me with school projects and applying for my first legal internship,” she told the outlet. “Without the internet I would probably still be in Oakland doing the same thing I was doing at age 12.”
Her trajectory over the intervening 26 years, however, has taken her a long way from busing tables. Shanahan attended prestigious St Mary’s College of California – at the same time that Black Panther director Ryan Coogler was also enrolled – before moving to Washington to study at the University of Puget Sound, where she majored in Asian Studies, Economics and Mandarin Chinese while running varsity cross country.
Upon graduation, she ventured even further afield, earning a graduate certificate in Switzerland and completing an exchange program in Singapore while studying for her law degree at Santa Clara University. While still a law student, she started ClearAccessIP, a company that billed itself as helping “creators and owners of IP to develop, manage, and transact patent-protected technology” – and married Jeremy Asher Kranz, a Bay Area investor, in 2013.
The following year would be a significant one for Shanahan. She graduated from law school in 2014; began a fellowship at CodeX, the Stanford Center for Legal Informatics; met her future husband, Google founder Sergey Brin, over the summer; saw her first husband file divorce papers that September; and, tragically, lost her father, Shawn Shanahan.
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