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Tech Was Supposed to Get Political. It’s Hanging Back in This Election.

SAN FRANCISCO — Over the last decade, this has become the tech industry’s hometown.

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Tech Was Supposed to Get Political. It’s Hanging Back in This Election.
By
DAVID STREITFELD
, New York Times

SAN FRANCISCO — Over the last decade, this has become the tech industry’s hometown.

But as voters go to the polls Tuesday to choose a mayor in one of San Francisco’s most disputed elections in recent memory, the industry that set off a high-rise construction boom and has been blamed for a housing crisis in the city is fading into the background.

That is quite a contrast to the last open mayoral election, in 2011. Tech leaders were featured in a video for their preferred candidate, Ed Lee, who went on to win and was re-elected in 2015. It has been viewed more than 600,000 times on YouTube. This year, several candidates are vying to replace Lee, who died in December, but none of them has tried to enlist tech in anything so striking.

What is happening — or rather not happening — in San Francisco is part of a broader urge in the tech community to stay behind the scenes in state and national politics. The overwhelmingly Democratic-leaning Silicon Valley was shocked by the 2016 election of Donald Trump and aghast at his anti-immigration ban, which cut to the heart of their existence as a multinational industry whose companies have often been founded by immigrants.

Tech got political, fast. Sergey Brin, a Google co-founder born in Russia, told 2,000 employees who were demonstrating against Trump’s actions in January 2017 that “some of us might even adopt Pence 2017 bumper stickers.” It was all but a direct endorsement of the new president’s impeachment.

But predictions that, for better or worse, tech and politics were henceforth going to be inseparable did not hold up.

Marc Benioff, the chief executive of Salesforce, drew national attention in 2015 when he said he would move his employees out of Indiana if a new state law that would have legalized discrimination was not changed. (It was.)

Benioff, a native of San Francisco and the most prominent tech executive in the city, was a financial backer of Lee. But he said in an interview Friday that the mayoral election was too important, too closely fought and too contentious for him to support any of the top four candidates: Jane Kim, Mark Leno, Angela Alioto or London Breed.

“This is the hottest election San Francisco has ever had for mayor,” he said. “I care so deeply, I cannot support one of the candidates. I don’t want to disenfranchise my ability to work with whoever is elected.” Sam Altman, the president of the influential startup accelerator Y Combinator, has not tweeted about politics all year — surprising reticence for someone who flirted with the idea of running for California governor last year.

“I’ve just been super busy,” Altman wrote in an email, adding that he had “no idea” why others had been so quiet. A spokesman for Reid Hoffman, the LinkedIn co-founder who previously showed an intense interest in politics, waved off an inquiry, saying: “Don’t really have anything new to report.”

Brin has no political thoughts to share at present, a Google spokeswoman said. Even Peter Thiel, who backed Trump when hardly anyone else in Silicon Valley would, appears not to be making any donations at the moment.

Hunter Walk, formerly with Google’s YouTube and now a venture capitalist, appeared in the 2011 video supporting Lee. “That was the beginning — and end — of my viral video career,” he said. Others in the video were Marissa Mayer, then chief executive of Yahoo, and Biz Stone, a co-founder of Twitter.

Walk said he was supporting Breed, the mayoral candidate who seems to have the most backing from tech. Stone said he was “usually not public about politics” but had been helping Breed “with social media strategy and expertise,” introducing her to knowledgeable people. Mayer, who could not be reached for comment, gave $500, the legal maximum, to Breed.

If tech is determined to be low-key about San Francisco politics, there is an eminently practical reason: fears of a backlash.

Ron Conway, a venture capitalist, was widely regarded — and sometimes condemned — as the power behind the throne for Lee, whose reign was very good for tech. Attempts to hold Uber and Airbnb responsible for skirting regulations largely failed. Twitter got a major tax break to stay in the city.

Conway championed Breed, a president of the board of supervisors who became interim mayor after Lee’s death, as the next mayor. At Lee’s funeral, he told Benioff, “We have to focus on getting London elected.” (Conway disputed that, writing, “At most, I acknowledged the historic significance of an African-American woman succeeding the city’s first Chinese-American mayor.”)

The venture capitalist moved too aggressively, however. The progressive wing of the board of supervisors removed Breed from the interim position after a few weeks, saying they did not want her to have an undue advantage in the election.

One of the supervisors, Hillary Ronen, said in a direct attack on Conway that there were “white, rich men — billionaires — in this city” who “steered the policies” of the two previous mayoral administrations. “They got us into this absolute mess we are in today where poor people and people of color cannot afford to live in this city,” she said.

Benioff called Conway “the Koch brothers of San Francisco,” a reference to the siblings who are heavy backers of conservative causes. He added: “That is his prerogative as a citizen of the United States. He feels he’s doing the right thing. He’s a good person. But he doesn’t speak for me or tech.”

Conway now says he has more important places to spend his time and resources than the mayor’s race.

“The future of our country and our progressive values are threatened by this president and this Congress, and candidly stopping them is ultimately far more important to me than who is elected Mayor of San Francisco on June 5th,” he wrote in an email.

Conway emphasized that he is still backing Breed, citing his belief that “she’s the only candidate who will truly tackle our city’s housing and homeless crises.” Gayle Conway, Conway’s wife, gave $200,000 in April to a committee that criticized Kim, who is on the city’s board of supervisors, for her vote to reinstate San Francisco’s sheriff, Ross Mirkarimi, six years ago. The sheriff, who was accused of domestic abuse, pleaded guilty to one count of false imprisonment. Lee suspended him and pressed for his removal, but the supervisors gave him his job back.

Domestic abuse, Conway said, is an issue he and his wife “have long been passionate about.” But the battle over the sheriff’s reinstatement was really about the mayor’s power to fire someone duly elected by the voters. A spokeswoman for Kim, Julie Johnson, said, “Ron Conway has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars attacking Jane Kim because she believes City Hall belongs to the people, not the billionaires. It’s that simple.”

Conway declined to specify his contributions for national organizations, but said that “this year alone, we are directly supporting and raising more than $5 million” for groups “challenging this terrible president and fighting for change to our gun and immigration laws.”

Breed is the clear tech favorite, but none of the leading mayoral candidates are decidedly anti-tech. It is too big and powerful an industry here for anyone who opposes it to get elected.

“San Francisco, despite its reputation, isn’t especially left wing,” said Ben Tarnoff, a San Francisco historian and editor of Logic, a new magazine focused on deepening the discourse around tech. “Its political leadership is reliably socially liberal, but it has largely governed within the policy parameters set by the real estate and tech industries.”

Change arises from below. But that’s where things get tricky. On Thursday morning, a group of housing activists renewed their protests against Google and the other tech companies by blocking a dozen commuter buses that carry employees from San Francisco to the campuses in Silicon Valley. One of their signs: “Candidates won’t save us.”

"Many of the people who form the most natural constituency for left-wing politics are being forced out of the city,” Tarnoff said. “The balance may tilt even further against them in the coming years.”

To put it another way, whoever wins on Tuesday, tech will not lose.

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