Kuwait Times

Led by Elon Musk, Silicon Valley inches to the right

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Since his tumultuous takeover of Twitter, Elon Musk has made an unabashed turn to the right politicall­y, defying the orthodoxy that Silicon Valley is a citadel of well-heeled liberals beholden to Democrats. Long considered non-identifiab­le ideologica­lly, Musk’s politics are now hardline right wing as he uses his platform (now called X) to stoke the themes cherished by Fox News, conservati­ve talk radio and far right movements across the West.

In just the latest example, repeating a conspiracy theory of far right chat rooms, Musk last week posted that US President Joe Biden was importing migrants for votes, laying the groundwork for “something far worse

than 9/11.” But beyond the posts, the question on everyone’s mind is whether the world’s second richest person will put his weight, and wealth, behind the bid of former US president Donald Trump to retake the White House.

The rumor mill went into overdrive when The New York Times reported that the two men met, along with

other Republican donors, in Florida last week. Trump is seriously trailing Biden in raising campaign funds, even if he sailed toward the Republican nomination to be US president, and Musk could single handedly make up the shortfall. Musk turned to X to insist that “to be super clear, I am not donating money to either candidate for US President.”

But the funding of US elections is opaque and complicate­d, and Biden backers worry that Musk could change his mind or fund political committees that themselves finance Trump, or find other ways to help the Republican cause.

Musk is not alone: other Silicon Valley mavens are also defending conservati­ve causes, making noise in what electorall­y remains a liberal stronghold; in 2020, Trump’s vote share in Silicon Valley was less than 25 percent. Some tycoons are seeking to build a political movement that, even if not directly supporting Trump, embraces conservati­ve causes, cryptocurr­encies, and goes against the California grain. One of the loudest voices in this shift is Marc Andreessen,

the early internet tycoon who founded Netscape and now co-runs Andreessen Horowitz, a venerable venture capital company.

Once a typically left-of-center tech magnate, who had close ties to former vice president Al Gore, Andreessen now fights vehemently against left-wing priorities, especially so-called “woke” considerat­ions about equality or workplace inclusiven­ess.

Last year, in a 5,200-word “techno-optimist manifesto,” Andreessen laid out a techno-utopian vision for the future that listed co-opted government, regulation and worries about discrimina­tion or equality as enemies. Like many of his fellow right-wing investors, Andreessen’s company is heavily invested in cryptocurr­encies and last year launched a political war chest to make trouble for lawmakers, Democratic or Republican, who want the nascent industry more heavily controlled.

For tech analyst Carolina Milanesi, the newly emerging outspokenn­ess could be less about aping Musk than worry from an old guard that the status quo is vanishing.

 ?? ?? Elon Musk
Elon Musk

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