Here is the entire article for those who get caught behind the paywall.

Mark

> On Aug 31, 2024, at 12:00 PM, Michael Meeropol via groups.io 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I have a feeling that the "issue" with these hi-tech billionaires is that 
> they haven't been rich long enough to develop class consciousness --- so they 
> are highly individualistic and very easily slighted (as when the Democrats 
> don't "listen to them" enough ---
> 
> https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2024/09/19/venture-backed-trumpism-ben-tarnoff/


September 19, 2024
Current IssueVenture-Backed Trumpism
Ben Tarnoff
Why have right-wing ideas found such an eager audience among tech elites during 
Biden’s presidency?
September 19, 2024 issue
Illustration by Paul SahreFacebook  Twitter   Mail to  Print page Submit a 
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Email us [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

Silicon Valley, strictly speaking, does not exist. Its geographic boundaries 
are fluid and contested; even the places considered central to it are oddly 
placeless. Driving through Menlo Park and Mountain View, you could be forgiven 
for thinking you were nowhere at all. What defines the Valley is something you 
can’t see: the velocity of the capital coursing through it. The region is home 
to more than $14 trillion worth of publicly traded companies, four of which are 
the largest on earth. It also includes some number of people who think Donald 
Trump should be the next president of the United States.

Trump has never been without admirers in the Northern California tech industry. 
But they appear to be more numerous in this election cycle. There is, of 
course, Elon Musk, who announced his endorsement within an hour of a bullet 
perforating the former president’s ear, posting a video to X of a fist-pumping 
Trump with blood on his face. “Last time America had a candidate this tough was 
Theodore Roosevelt,” he bubbled in a follow-up post. Trump, in turn, wants to 
offer Musk a job in his administration.

About a dozen other high-ranking figures from Silicon Valley have also declared 
their support. The venture capitalist and Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale has 
given $1 million to a Trump-allied super PAC, as has Sequoia Capital’s Doug 
Leone. Another Sequoia partner, Shaun Maguire, has contributed $300,000, while 
Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, cofounders of the venture capital firm 
Andreessen Horowitz, have publicly promised to make a significant contribution. 
In June the venture capitalist David Sacks held a $300,000-a-plate fundraiser 
in his San Francisco home that brought in $12 million. Several other tech 
notables were in attendance, including the venture capitalist Shervin Pishevar 
and the crypto barons Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss.

Trump’s selection of the Ohio senator J.D. Vance as his running mate has 
thrilled his Valley backers. Vance has long-standing ties to tech thanks to his 
friendship with the venture capitalist Peter Thiel, who helped him break into 
the industry as a recent Yale Law graduate. Vance lived in the Bay Area from 
2015 to 2017, working first as a biotech executive and then at Mithril Capital, 
a venture firm that Thiel cofounded. Vance cofounded his own venture firm in 
Cincinnati in 2020, shortly before embarking on a political career in which his 
Valley connections proved indispensable. Thiel contributed $15 million to 
Vance’s 2022 Senate run; Sacks gave $1 million. More recently, these men (and 
they are all men), together with Musk, lobbied Trump to add Vance to the 
ticket. “WE HAVE A FORMER TECH VC IN THE WHITE HOUSE GREATEST COUNTRY ON EARTH 
BABY,” Delian Asparouhov, another Thiel-linked venture capitalist, hollered on 
X after the announcement.

Media coverage of the Trump-Vance-Valley nexus has been extensive and, at 
times, hyperbolic. The Washington Postspeaks of a “Silicon Valley realignment.” 
According to The Nation, “Silicon Valley has been fully MAGA-pilled.” Not 
exactly: by the numbers, the region remains thoroughly Democratic. Santa Clara 
County, a decent if imperfect proxy for Silicon Valley, has no Republican 
elected officials at the county, state, or federal levels. In 2020 Biden won 
the county with more than 72 percent of the vote. Moreover, a number of tech 
executives and investors are major Democratic funders: before Biden withdrew 
from the race, Yahoo reported that eight of his campaign’s top twenty 
contributors came from Silicon Valley. The elevation of Oakland-born 
vice-president Kamala Harris, who has cultivated relationships with tech since 
she began her political career as San Francisco’s district attorney, has 
further energized the industry’s donor networks. All available evidence 
suggests that Trumpism remains a minority tendency within the tech patriciate.

Still, there is no doubt that right-wing ideas have found a wider audience 
among tech elites during Biden’s presidency, as exemplified by Musk. A few of 
Trumpism’s current adherents in the Valley do have a history in conservative 
politics—Sacks and Andreessen backed Mitt Romney in 2012, and Leone is a 
longtime Republican donor—but most of them opposed Trump in the past. Others 
could be described as ex-Democrats, or at least people whose loyalties used to 
lie mostly with the Democratic Party. There have been some stark reversals. In 
2016 the venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya declared that he would 
“absolutely” kick somebody off his board for donating to Trump. In June of this 
year, he sat next to the former president at Sacks’s San Francisco fundraiser 
and led an informal poll about who Trump should choose as his running mate. 
(Everybody agreed: pick Vance.)
How to explain this shift? Up close, any individual’s politics can be quite 
strange: a ragged mix of concepts and convictions, selected from motley 
sources, held together with hearsay and anecdotes. That includes Silicon 
Valley’s Trumpists. But ideology never develops in a vacuum; it depends in 
large part on how people make their living. The theorist Stuart Hall described 
economic life as a “net of constraints” for people’s ideas about society—a sort 
of filter through which the material percolates into the ideological. For the 
Trumpists of Silicon Valley, this suggests that the nature of their livelihood 
may give us a clue as to the origins of their attitudes. As it happens, almost 
all of them make their living the same way. They are, in both vocation and 
outlook, venture capitalists.
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An assemblage of dams, reservoirs, and aqueducts is required to turn 
California’s dry interior into farmland. Water is meticulously diverted so that 
billions of dollars of grapes can grow. Silicon Valley’s venture 
capitalists—working out of firms such as Andreessen Horowitz, with $43 billion 
under management, and Sequoia Capital, with more than $50 billion—believe they 
serve a similar function. They channel cash to deserving “disruptors” so that 
innovation can bloom.

It can be a fickle business. Venture capitalists make money for themselves and 
their “limited partners” (LPs)—pension funds, university endowments, wealthy 
families—by investing in start-ups. Most fail, but a winning bet on the next 
Google can generate extraordinary returns. Since LPs supply venture capital 
funds with the vast majority of their cash, they must be persuaded that the 
risk of committing money to such an enterprise is worth the potential reward.

In 2021 rock-bottom interest rates increased investors’ appetite for risk, 
helping US venture capital funds raise an unprecedented $128.3 billion, a 
nearly 50 percent increase from the previous year. In 2022 the sector smashed 
that record, raising $173 billion. Then, in 2023, fundraising fell off a cliff, 
dropping 60 percent. So far, 2024 is on pace to be another bad year.

One culprit is rising interest rates. Another is that there are fewer “exits,” 
or opportunities for venture capitalists to sell their equity stake when a 
start-up goes public or is acquired. The weak market for initial public 
offerings (IPOs)—the first shares sold when a company goes public—means that 
tech companies are taking longer to go public, if they do so at all. Meanwhile, 
mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in tech have hit a multiyear low.

Big firms like Meta and Alphabet are focused on efficiency and cost savings, 
which means they aren’t snapping up start-ups like they used to. At the same 
time the Biden administration’s spirited approach to antitrust enforcement is 
putting a damper on dealmaking. This has produced what the journalist Dan 
Primack calls a “liquidity drought”: without exits, LPs can’t get their cash 
out of the fund. In response, venture capitalists are scrambling to come up 
with ways to return money to LPs, such as selling their shares in start-ups to 
other investors through the so-called secondary market.

The boom in generative AI, which has seen start-ups attract billions of dollars 
in investment in the hope of advancing (and commercializing) the technology 
popularized by ChatGPT, has provided some respite, but not nearly enough. 
Because generative AI requires large concentrations of computing power, 
start-ups can’t compete directly with the big tech companies. Instead they are 
forced into licensing deals and other kinds of partnerships, which sharply 
limit the returns available to their investors. For venture capitalists, it may 
feel as though the universe is conspiring against them: at the same time that 
macroeconomic conditions are making it harder for them to raise or return 
money, the hot technology of the day favors the corporate incumbents. The 
largest venture fortunes in history were made from the mid-1990s to the 
mid-2010s, when a farsighted or merely fortunate venture capitalist could earn 
colossal sums by backing successful Internet companies like eBay and Facebook. 
Today, the routes to such lucre appear fewer and farther between.

If economic conditions are becoming less hospitable for venture capitalists 
looking to multiply money, the political environment presents challenges as 
well. Trump’s Silicon Valley backers are outraged at several steps taken by 
Biden, who has wielded the regulatory powers of his office more eagerly than 
they expected.
The first challenge concerns crypto. The Biden-appointed chair of the 
Securities Exchange Commission, Gary Gensler, has taken the view that most 
digital currencies are securities, and therefore that the companies trafficking 
in them are subject to securities law. He has been particularly vigorous in 
using rulemaking and litigation to tame the sector. This has infuriated crypto 
devotees, who are well represented within the Silicon Valley Trumpist set, 
among them Andreessen, Horowitz, and the Winklevoss brothers.

A second, related issue is AI regulation. Here the Biden administration has 
been more tentative, issuing an executive order in October 2023 that instructs 
federal agencies to undertake various initiatives aimed at ensuring the 
“responsible” use of AI. Much of the measure directs officials to draw up 
guidelines, conduct studies, and establish task forces. But it does contain a 
mandate for the private sector. Invoking the Truman-era Defense Production Act, 
the executive order compels tech companies developing large AI models to share 
certain information with the federal government, including the results of the 
safety tests they run to identify possible dangers such as cybersecurity 
vulnerabilities or “the use of software or tools to influence real or virtual 
events.” Venture capitalists worry that such regulation may make the AI market 
even harder to navigate as investors. “If there’s a reign of terror from the 
government for AI the way there has been for blockchain, the country is in 
profound trouble,” Andreessen fretted in July on the episode of his and 
Horowitz’s podcast, The Ben and Marc Show, in which they endorsed Trump.

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The two men are also distressed by what they see as Biden’s favoritism toward 
the big tech companies. AI regulation will further fortify large firms like 
Microsoft, they believe, by introducing compliance requirements that start-ups 
can’t possibly satisfy. “They’re going to basically destroy the start-up 
ecosystem,” says Andreessen. “They’re going to enshrine essentially an OPEC of 
AI.”

Yet venture capital’s relationship to bigness is more complex than these lines 
imply. One way to get rich as a venture capitalist is to make a bet on the next 
Google, but another way is to make a bet on a company that gets acquired by 
Google for a lot of money. In the first case you want a market that is porous 
enough to let a newcomer become an incumbent. In the second case you want 
incumbents that are large enough to be able to pay well for your start-up—but 
not so large that they never feel the need to shop for new technology or co-opt 
up-and-coming competitors. In 2014 Facebook paid $22 billion for WhatsApp, one 
of the priciest acquisitions of a venture-backed start-up ever. The goal, as 
the journalist Henry Blodget wrote at the time, was “to both own ‘the next 
Facebook’ and prevent ‘the next Facebook’ from eating Facebook’s lunch.”

This discordant set of motivations accounts for a certain ambivalence among the 
Silicon Valley Trumpists toward antitrust policy, an area in which the Biden 
administration has sought to distinguish itself. Andreessen, for his part, 
attacks the White House for favoring large firms while complaining that 
regulators are blocking those very same firms from acquiring start-ups. This is 
not hypocrisy, exactly: it is a contradiction rooted in contradictory interests.

What would Trump do as president? In courting Silicon Valley, he has made 
several promises. For one, he has embraced crypto, vowing to fire Gensler and 
put an end to the “persecution” of the industry. He also wants to reverse 
Biden’s AI rules. The GOP platform puts it nicely: “We will repeal Joe Biden’s 
dangerous Executive Order that hinders AI Innovation, and imposes Radical 
Leftwing ideas on the development of this technology.”
As for antitrust, the outlook is less clear. Vance has expressed support for 
Lina Khan, Biden’s energetic FTC chair, and called for the breakup of Google 
because it is, he believes, “an explicitly progressive technology company.” 
Still, it’s hard to believe that a Republican administration would do much to 
constrain corporate power—though it might try to punish certain tech monopolies 
that are perceived as political enemies. Vance has been particularly exercised 
about the supposed liberal bias in Google search results, as well as by the 
fact that the company’s AI image generator has been known to spontaneously 
produce such “woke” abominations as pictures of a woman pope or a Black Viking.

But the government isn’t just a regulator; it is also a customer. This is 
another basis for Trump’s support within Silicon Valley: the belief that his 
administration would hand more government contracts to venture-backed 
businesses. Vance is expected to be especially useful in this regard, given his 
links to Thiel and other Valley personalities.

Thiel was Trump’s most prominent tech patron in 2016, though he has not donated 
to the current campaign. (The former president’s administration was “crazier” 
and “more dangerous” than Thiel expected, he told The Atlantic last year.) More 
broadly, he remains the godfather of the Silicon Valley right. The German-born 
investor is especially adept at nurturing relationships with younger men who 
share his taste for reactionary authoritarianism and promoting their careers in 
politics and tech. He is also a central node in a web of defense and 
intelligence start-ups that stand to profit from a second Trump term.

The best known is Palantir, the data analytics company Thiel cofounded, whose 
software is popular with the Pentagon and many other organs of the security 
state. (One of his cofounders is the Trump booster Joe Lonsdale.) Another 
company in the Thiel network is Anduril, cofounded by Trump stalwart Palmer 
Luckey, which specializes in autonomous defense systems. Thiel’s Founders Fund, 
along with Andreessen Horowitz and Lonsdale’s venture firm 8VC, are all 
investors, and Vance also holds shares in the company. Then there is Scale AI, 
a Thiel-funded start-up that sells AI services to the military. It enjoys a 
particularly strong tie to Trumpworld: the managing director, Michael Kratsios, 
is a Thiel protégé who worked for the Trump White House as its chief technology 
adviser.

These firms have benefited from the booming arms trade initiated by Russia’s 
invasion of Ukraine. The war has also spotlighted the value of drones, which 
the Ukrainians have used to great effect in leveling the playing field against 
a better-equipped enemy. The rest of the world is paying attention: militaries 
around the globe are investing heavily in unmanned technologies. This has 
created an opening for smaller contractors, who tend to be more adept at 
building data-intensive, software-driven weapons systems than the larger 
corporations that have traditionally dominated the war business. According to 
PitchBook, a financial research firm, a record 356 aerospace and defense 
companies raised venture capital funding last year, securing a total of $7.17 
billion.

Aside from accelerating this trend, Trump may also devote more resources to 
developing military AI: The Washington Post recently reported that the former 
president’s allies are drafting an executive order that would inaugurate a 
series of “Manhattan Projects” toward that end. As always China is the 
motivating obsession. When Trump met with Andreessen and Horowitz for a 
three-hour dinner, he reportedly told them, “AI is very scary, but we 
absolutely have to win. Because if we don’t win then China wins, and that’s a 
very bad world.” The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, a blueprint for a 
second Trump term, speaks gravely of Chinese advancements in AI and calls for 
“unified action to counter them.”

A further path to public money lies in immigration enforcement. For years ICE 
has used custom-built software developed by Palantir to store, access, and 
analyze data about individuals suspected of immigration violations. These tools 
help agents identify people to capture and deport. Anduril, meanwhile, is 
deploying nearly two hundred of its AI-powered surveillance towers to the 
US–Mexico border. If elected, Trump promises to militarize the border to an 
even greater extreme, as well as to undertake mass deportations. Coordinating 
the logistics involved would likely create more contracting opportunities for 
venture-backed start-ups.

To some venture capitalists, these linkages between the public and private 
sectors augur a new future for the industry, one in which tech companies would 
partner with the state to strengthen its coercive capacities at home and 
abroad. This is a future with a strong resemblance to the past: in its early 
days as a semiconductor manufacturing zone, Silicon Valley relied on the 
Pentagon for nearly all its revenue. Nobody is nostalgic for quite that degree 
of dependency, but the venture capital wing of the military-industrial complex 
is keen to expand its footprint. Earlier this year Andreessen Horowitz launched 
its American Dynamism fund, which invests in companies “supporting the national 
interest.” It has poured money into a related lobbying effort, spending almost 
$1 million in 2023 alone. In a blog post, Andreessen and Horowitz describe the 
importance of defense contracting in world-historical terms: start-ups, as “the 
vanguard of American technological supremacy,” ensured US global domination in 
the twentieth century. “There is no reason the 21st Century cannot be a Second 
American Century,” they believe—provided the government directs its dollars to 
the right place.

Silicon Valley’s Trump backers are also worried about taxes. Modern venture 
capital is in large part a creature of the tax code: the sector only really 
took off in the 1980s, after Congress slashed the tax rate for capital gains by 
almost 50 percent in 1978. Silicon Valley played a decisive part in that 
development. Leading the effort was the American Electronics Association, a 
trade group founded back in the 1940s to lobby for government contracts. Its 
operatives testified on Capitol Hill, circulated white papers, and identified 
sympathetic representatives and senators to build bipartisan momentum behind 
the bill.

The next year Silicon Valley notched another victory by persuading the 
Department of Labor to loosen a rule that had kept institutional investors like 
pension funds and university endowments from committing money to venture 
capital on account of its higher risk. The lobbying breakthroughs of the late 
1970s led to an influx of investment, catapulting venture capital into its 
Gordon Gekko era. In 1977 VC firms managed around $2.5 billion; by 1983 that 
number had grown almost fivefold, to $12 billion.

This history helps clarify the horror expressed by some venture capitalists at 
Biden’s plans to increase taxes on capital gains. While the specifics of the 
idea have changed over the years, the administration’s most recent budget 
proposal would impose a minimum income tax of 25 percent on households with 
wealth in excess of $100 million. Crucially, it would use an expanded 
definition of income that includes unrealized capital gains—that is, an 
appreciation in the value of unsold stocks, property, or other assets.

Currently, capital gains are taxed only when the underlying asset is sold. (If 
you hold it for less than a year, it’s taxed at the same rate as ordinary 
income; if you hold it for more than one year, it’s taxed at a more favorable 
lower rate.) In practice, this means that wealthier Americans can choose when 
they pay taxes—a luxury most people don’t enjoy. They can also shrink their tax 
burden by passing assets along to their children, who will be taxed only on the 
difference between the market value of the asset when it was inherited and its 
price when sold.

Biden’s Billionaire Minimum Income Tax, as he calls it, aims to reduce these 
advantages of capital ownership. Perhaps its most threatening aspect from the 
perspective of venture capitalists is that it would erode a central pillar of 
their power: their ability to determine how much a company is worth. Before a 
company goes public, its value is typically set by its investors. Venture 
capitalists generally have an interest in inflating that value, in the hopes of 
arranging a lucrative exit. In Biden’s proposal, however, the IRS would be the 
one that ultimately decides the valuation of “non-tradable” assets, such as 
equity in a start-up. This would put investors in a bind: inflating valuations 
may lead to a bigger payday, but it would also mean a greater tax liability.
All this is, at present, hypothetical: there is no chance that the Billionaire 
Minimum Income Tax will make it through Congress, much less the Supreme Court. 
And yet it still has Trump’s Silicon Valley supporters seething. Andreessen 
calls it “the final straw” that pushed him toward Trump. Horowitz sees it as 
Leninism. “When the Bolshevik Revolution happened, Lenin’s first idea was to 
kill all the rich people,” he muses. “But you run out of rich people pretty 
fast, it turns out. Particularly if you’re killing them.”

Silicon Valley is still trying to figure out what a Harris administration would 
entail for tech. The signals are mixed. On the one hand, she led the effort on 
the AI executive order as the White House’s “AI czar.” On the other hand, she 
has friendships with Silicon Valley executives and investors dating from the 
early 2000s. And nothing in her tenure as California’s attorney general or as a 
senator would indicate an appetite for taking on Silicon Valley.

Yet Harris, like any president, would be working under certain constraints. One 
of these is the politics of her party, which have moved to the left in recent 
years. During the 2020 primaries, tech magnates were united in their antipathy 
to Bernie Sanders. “Silicon Valley Leaders’ Plea to Democrats: Anyone but 
Sanders,” read a New York Times headline. Four years later, they find 
themselves living under a Democratic administration that has embraced much of 
the Sanders agenda. The hated wealth tax comes from Sanders and Elizabeth 
Warren, as do many of the ideas behind the Biden administration’s surprisingly 
progressive domestic agenda, which has included an expansion of the safety net, 
a regulatory push around antitrust and consumer protection, a meaningful if 
inadequate climate bill, and the most pro-labor National Labor Relations Board 
since the 1940s.

What upsets the Trumpists of Silicon Valley is not only the policy platform 
associated with this shift but, more broadly, the feeling that the Democrats 
have abandoned them. One of the factors behind Musk’s rightward turn was 
Biden’s failure to invite him to a White House summit of EV manufacturers in 
August 2021, reportedly because of Tesla’s notorious union busting. “The 
Democratic party I knew under Obama doesn’t exist anymore,” Shervin Pishevar 
told the Financial Times from the Republican National Convention. “One thing” 
that Obama had going for him, Horowitz has lamented, was that “he was always 
interested in what business had to say.”

The phrasing is telling: the injury lies in being ignored, in being denied the 
respectful attention that is their due. Obama, like Bill Clinton before him, 
didn’t just promote Silicon Valley’s interests. He worshiped tech. The Internet 
would ignite a new era of American dynamism, make the world a better place, 
democratize everything. Tech entrepreneurs were rock stars, savants. They were 
the advance guard of humanity, leading us into a glorious future.
This is the rhetoric that helped secure Silicon Valley’s allegiance to the 
Democrats in the first place. Back in the 1970s and 1980s, the region leaned 
Republican. “For all the hype around the countercultural personal-computer 
crowd,” observes the historian Margaret O’Mara, “Silicon Valley remained in the 
hands of patriotic midcentury men who’d grown rich in the Cold War economy.” 
These were men like David Packard, the Republican cofounder of Hewlett-Packard, 
who exerted considerable influence over the industry’s politics, and Ed Zschau, 
the tech entrepreneur who led the lobbying effort to lower the capital gains 
tax and then went on to represent Silicon Valley’s interests in Congress as a 
Republican in the 1980s.

Santa Clara County voted Republican in every presidential election from 1972 to 
1984. Then, in 1988, Michael Dukakis won the county by a narrow margin. Dukakis 
owed his political profile to the high-tech boom then unfolding in his home 
state of Massachusetts. He was also an innovator of the pro-business centrism 
later perfected by Clinton, which helped him attract a voting bloc of affluent 
professionals, the so-called Atari Democrats. It would be this brand of 
politics that drew Silicon Valley into the Democratic camp during the 1990s. 
Driving this realignment was not just policy but flattery. Democratic 
politicians told tech they would govern for its benefit, and that tech’s 
beneficence would benefit everyone.

Democrats, for the most part, don’t talk like that anymore. The question is 
whether their diminished sycophancy, and the new left-liberal dispensation that 
has accompanied it, will endanger the party’s dominance within elite tech 
circles. “I personally am not thrilled by the direction [of the Democratic 
Party],” Alex Karp, Palantir cofounder and CEO, told the Financial Times, “but 
how far can they go before I reconsider?” Karp remains a Democrat, but his 
loyalty is conditional. If enough men of his rank feel that their standing 
within the party is slipping, and that the other side offers better advantages 
and endearments, more of them may follow the example of tech’s Trumpists and 
return the Silicon Valley leadership class to the Republican fold. After all, 
it is an industry organized around the idea that nothing lasts forever.



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