Silicon Valley Politics

The Silicon Valley, where I will have made my home for 6 years this July, has always been slightly different from the rather Leftist politics of the Bay Area at large. Things here have always been judged on results than on ideology, and there's a healthy mix of anti-Establishmentarianism, as well as the sagacity to recognize when the characters comprising the Establishment has changed.

Rich Karlgaard, publisher of Forbes magazine, expands on this some more, and in David Letterman style provides a ten-point list:


  1. Silicon Valley is 30 miles from San Francisco but a galaxy away in politics. San Francisco is old left. It cross-dresses libertarian but always sides with unions, rent control, "living wages" and undemocratic court fiats. Silicon Valley, while voting Democrat of late, is more right than it appears. It celebrates capital formation, hard work, and unequal outcomes from equal chance.

  2. San Francisco loves Barbara Boxer and laughs at Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Valley likes Arnold and loathes Barbara.

  3. Right leaning libertarians in Silicon Valley vote Republican. But they hate Washington. This is funny as their party is in power. Right-lib Craig Barrett, CEO of Intel, blasts the Republican Congress and its restrictions on skills-based immigrants. He rails against Washington's war on stock options. President Bush's picks of aluminum and railroad barons to head Treasury seem weird.

  4. Lefty libertarians vote Democrat and also hate Washington. This makes perfect sense. There is not a single libertarian Democrat pol east of the Potomac. Valley Democrats pegged John Kerry as patronizing, slow-moving, risk-averse, old money--every value Silicon Valley fights. Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen, a donor to the Clinton and Gore campaigns, said he was sickened by Sen. Kerry's tirades against free trade.

  5. On the whole, the Valley favors looser laws on copyrights and patents. For every carp about China ripping off our tech, one hears 10 complaints about Hollywood thwarting progress. On the MGM v. Grokster divide, Valley liberals and conservatives see Grokster as the disrupter and MGM as the slow-footed shuffling beast.

  6. In Washington, Republicans are the daddy party and Democrats are the mommy party. But out here, Republicans are the hardware party and Democrats are the software party. Intel's Mr. Barrett and Cisco's John Chambers sell gadgets and vote Republican. Google's Eric Schmidt and Oracle's Larry Ellison sell vapor and vote Democrat.

  7. Republicans like to say the Valley was built on Moore's Law and risk capital. Democrats say the Valley was built on dreams and rebellion.

  8. Valley Democrats and Republicans agree on: free trade, China optimism, the need to lift Congressional quotas on skills-based immigration, hatred of Sarbanes-Oxley and trial lawyers, the woeful state of K-12 education, the need for more federal science funding, the "they don't get it" obtuseness of telephone companies, cable companies and Hollywood studios, and the predictable failure of outsider CEOs such as John Sculley at Apple and Carly Fiorina at H-P.

  9. They disagree on: the Iraq war, cultural values, the intelligence (i.e., math SAT scores) of George W. Bush, whether abolishing estate taxes will help small business or wreck meritocracy, and how to fix the K-12 system.

  10. Silicon Valley has no clout in Washington.


(Hat-tip: OpinionJournal)

[Cross-posted at Between Worlds]

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