-Caveat Lector-

http://www.motherjones.com/web_exclusives/special_reports/mojo_400/tech.html

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE LIST OF ALL 400 DONORS

http://www.motherjones.com/web_exclusives/special_reports/mojo_400/browse.html


DIG INTO THE 400

Search the 400 by donor, state, industry, party, or recipient.

http://www.motherjones.com/web_exclusives/special_reports/mojo_400/search.html

OR Browse the list by rank.

http://www.motherjones.com/web_exclusives/special_reports/mojo_400/browse.html


THE HIGH TECH INDUSTRY

The top contributors in this industry are:

14. David Shimmon
off-track betting

19. Steven Kirsch
"the current system sucks"

21. Michael Perik
software's soft money

26. David Bohnett
from Yahoo to Stonewall

31. John Chambers
the Cisco kid
All contributors in this industry

Mother Jones
March 5, 2001

MoJo 400: Silicon Battleground

Special Report High-tech executives have become major campaign
donors -- and their politics are not what you might expect. A
special feature from our MoJo 400 campaign finance project.

by Sara Miles

Silicon Valley has been heralded as the Holy Grail of political
fundraising since the Internet boom took off in 1995. A new and
untapped industry without entrenched party loyalties, hyped to
the hilt, and run by young, politically naive bazillionaires --
it seemed a bagman's dream.

Both Democrats and Republicans, drawn by the lure of cold cash
and the romance of the hot new thing, flocked to the Valley
seeking supporters.

The conservative "New Democrats" of the Democratic Leadership
Council and New Democrat Network got their foothold first,
proclaiming a pro-business, pro-trade, pro-choice, pro-immigrant,
pro-gay rights, and antiunion message they pitched to resonate
with Northern California's young entrepreneurs. With the support
of Silicon Valley's preeminent venture capitalist, John Doerr of
Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers (No. 55, $477,500), the
Democrats assembled a brain trust of influential CEOs labeled
"Gore-Techs," who lent their cyber-cool to then-Vice President Al
Gore. Leaders of the Internet era like Steven Kirsch of Infoseek
(No. 19, $655,000) and Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen (No.
71, $404,000) gave increasing amounts of cash to the party. The
White House and New Democrats in Congress responded with support
for high tech's agenda, including more visas for foreign
high-tech workers, a moratorium on Internet taxes, tax credits
for research and development, and support for free trade with
China. "This administration really gets it," said a satisfied
Doerr.

As the 2000 campaign heated up, however, things began to change.
The final figures show that Republicans took in $18 million from
high tech -- almost as much as the $19.9 million raised by
Democrats. The near parity is shocking, given that the Valley was
essentially Gore's to lose. Bush put together a national
high-tech advisory council that raised money from the computer
industry.

But an increasingly disorganized Gore campaign -- as well as what
Valley boys perceived as the vice president's postconvention
"populism" -- also drove techies into the compassionate embrace
of the Republicans.

"When Gore said the stock market was like playing 'roulette,' it
was the kiss of death," says a Democratic political consultant
who raised money for Gore in Silicon Valley. "Why is he dissing
the stock market? It makes everyone think he doesn't understand
the New Economy, that he's big government all over again." No
such fears with George W. Bush, who crowed to a high-tech crowd,
"If I am president, I will always take the side of... private
initiative over federal regulation." His rhetoric cheered
high-tech businessmen like John Chambers of Cisco Systems (No.
31, $582,933), Michael Dell of Dell Computer in Austin (No. 104,
$328,000), and Valley titan and former Netscape CEO James
Barksdale (No. 252, $212,000).


What donor in this industry wants to wire schools -- and profit from
running them?

Although the brash, baseball-capped CEO of ClickAction, Gregory
Slayton (who contributed just $22,985 of his own money to
Republicans), evangelized for Bush in the Valley and raised the
Texas governor's profile among younger entrepreneurs, Bush's
biggest high-tech supporters don't run startups. The
business-to-business corporation J.D. Edwards, whose chief, C.
Edward McVaney (No. 115, $312,000), gave to the Republicans, has
spent the last 20 years providing software for companies like
Mobil, Chevron, and R.J. Nabisco; the firm's fortunes are
directly tied to those of the finance, pharmaceutical,
automotive, and utilities industries. Richard Egan (No. 101,
$331,100), a former Lockheed and Honeywell executive, chairs the
EMC Corporation, which plans to spend $1.7 billion researching
software by the end of this year -- an incentive to seek more
generous R&D tax credits from the Bush administration.

Such techies are joined in their donations to Republicans by
mainstream venture capitalists and investment bankers who
specialize in tech deals, including Rockwell Schnabel (No. 194,
$256,100) of Trident Capital and Thomas Weisel (No. 185,
$260,000), a former executive with the investment firm of
Montgomery Securities.

Newly retired Internet millionaires tend to have reasons less
immediately self-interested and more ideological for backing
Bush. James Kimsey (No. 69), the founder and retired chairman of
AOL, gave a total of $406,350, three-fourths of it to
Republicans. A flashy and outspoken former Army Ranger, Kimsey
has strong conservative opinions and uses his wealth to twist
arms in Congress and to conduct his own international diplomacy.
"If you mealy-mouth around," Kimsey told Newsweek in 1999 after a
controversial visit to China during which he met with senior
military leaders, "you're not effective."

Kenneth Eldred (No. 25, $617,500), a founder of
business-to-business leader Ariba, Inc. and former CEO of the
computer marketer Inmac, has an even longer-term agenda. Eldred
says his current network of telecommunications and software
companies is run by people with Christian values, and the profits
are reinvested to spread the gospel in countries like China and
India. "We're sort of sneaking our way up the tiger's tail," he
says.

The donations he and his wife made to Bush, he adds, stem from
spiritual, rather than corporate, concerns. "I have no financial
interest in this man being president," says the high-tech
executive, who opposes abortion and supports school vouchers. "We
looked to George Bush as someone who can reestablish the values
in our nation."

Over the next four years, the influence of techies is only likely
to increase. Andreessen, the Netscape co-founder, has spoken
publicly about the difference between the value of money in the
world of politics and in Silicon Valley, where an investment of
$250,000 is seen as not "serious." And he has a point -- one his
Republican counterparts are well aware of. It cost just over
$152,000 to make it onto the Mother Jones 400 -- and for the
thousands of new millionaires that have been created in Silicon
Valley, that's likely to seem a serious bargain.

Illustration by Christoph Hitz

© FOUNDATION FOR NATIONAL PROGRESS


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