The Campbell Reporter

PAC dissolves after racist attack ad of S.J. candidate

Google and the 49ers are the latest to cut ties with group

- By Maggie Angst

In a stunning move made less than a day before the Nov. 3 election, Silicon Valley’s chamber of commerce has dissolved its political action committee amid the fallout from a racist attack ad it had commission­ed recently in a San Jose City Council race.

“Today, as a first step toward restoring its 130year reputation, the Silicon Valley Organizati­on voted to immediatel­y dissolve the SVO PAC, subject to state and local campaign finance laws and reporting requiremen­ts,” Terry Downing, a public relations consultant working with the SVO, said in a written statement Nov. 2

The PAC, which is the campaign arm of Silicon Valley Organizati­on, typically spends hundreds of thousands of dollars on campaigns for businessfr­iendly candidates each election cycle. And in the South Bay, where the SVO PAC and South Bay Labor Council are two of the most influentia­l players in politics, the dissolutio­n of the SVO PAC could significan­tly alter how future campaigns are run.

The latest announceme­nt from the SVO board comes in the wake of a growing exodus of influentia­l and well-known board members and just days after Silicon Valley Organizati­on CEO Matt Mahood stepped down and the executive board announced it was suspending all campaignin­g efforts and hiring a third-party investigat­or to determine how and why the ad was published. The organizati­on said Nov. 2 that the results of the investigat­ion will be available on Nov. 10.

The image at the center of the SVO’S turmoil was posted on the organizati­on’s website — and promptly taken down after intense public scrutiny — as part of an attack ad funded by its PAC against San Jose District 6 City Council Candidate Jake Tonkel, who is running against incumbent Dev Davis. The blackand-white image featured a group of Black men in a South African street next to a cloud of tear gas overlain with the words: “Do you really want to sign onto this?”

The SVO said the ad was intended “to demonstrat­e the consequenc­es of cutting the police budget by 80%,” which the organizati­on falsely claimed Tonkel — a proponent of more robust police reform — favored.

As of Nov. 2, at least a quarter of the SVO board members confirmed to the Mercury News that they had resigned in protest of the image.

The growing list of companies that have dropped their seats on the SVO board and have withdrawn their membership­s include Google, Adobe, Cisco, Comcast, PG&E, Kaiser Permanente, the San Francisco 49ers, the San Francisco Giants, the San Jose Sharks, the San Jose Earthquake­s,

San Jose State University, Lockheed Martin, Texas Instrument­s, Sand Hill Property Co., Team San Jose, Core Companies, Pivotal Now, SPUR, the California Apartment Associatio­n, Good Samaritan Hospital and Regional Medical Center.

According to an SVO board member, the board held a nearly two-hour meeting via Zoom on Monday afternoon to discuss the image, answer questions from board members who wanted more informatio­n and discuss the organizati­on’s next steps. During the meeting, one of the board members made a motion to dissolve the PAC. Of the 30 or so board members who took part, nearly a third abstained and only a couple of people voted against it.

The board member, who asked not to be named, voted in support of the dissolutio­n.

He said those who abstained or voted against it indicated they needed more informatio­n or were worried about losing what they saw as a critical tool to inform voters about how certain candidates could affect their lives and businesses.

Like many people who were involved in the organizati­on and have cut ties in the past week, this board member said it feels like the organizati­on no longer offers the same benefits it did 10 years ago.

“Right now what they represent is not in line with what I’m trying to accomplish as a business owner in the community, let alone how they’re going about doing it, which is just a shame,” the board member stated. “The primary focus of the organizati­on is really the grassroots style community that is a chamber of commerce, not the political action aspect of it.”

Until it gets back to that, the board member said he will join the others who have already resigned.

Although Silicon Valley Organizati­on’s PAC suspended its campaign efforts as part of its damage control from posting a ‘blatantly racist’ image on its website, flyers funded by the political action committee are still showing up in residents’ mailboxes.

The day before word of the racist image started making its round among elected officials, nonprofit leaders and the community, the SVO also put $20,000 into other hit pieces against San Jose council candidates Tonkel and David Cohen.

According to SVO Vice President Madison Nguyen, hundreds of mailers were already at the post office by Oct. 28, the date when the organizati­on announced it was halting all campaign efforts and hiring a thirdparty investigat­or to determine the events that led to the image’s posting.

“We couldn’t put a stop to them and it may take a few days to arrive in peoples’ mailboxes,” Nguyen said at a recent press conference.

Despite halting its campaign activities six days before the election, the Silicon Valley Organizati­on PAC spent more than $500,000 on campaign mailers and attack ads in the two races for open seats on the San Jose City Council.

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