USA TODAY US Edition

Gianforte’s slam underscore­s how tech, politics intertwine

Conservati­ve candidate for U.S. House made his fortune in Silicon Valley — not Montana

- Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY

It was the body slam charge felt around the political and tech world, and it happened in Montana, where the great wealth generated from a two-decade tech boom backed a fierce campaign for U.S. Congress.

Greg Gianforte, the GOP House candidate who was cited for allegedly assaulting a reporter on election eve, funded his conservati­ve political career with the sale of his customer relationsh­ip management company, RightNow Technologi­es, to Oracle for $1.5 billion in 2011. Before that, he sold software company Brightwork Developmen­t to then-McAfee Associates for $10 million in 1994.

At the same time, newly politicall­y active tech workers, hailing largely from the San Francisco Bay Area and other tech hubs, pumped money into the campaign for his Democratic opponent, musician Rob Quist.

It’s just one more sign of how the riches of this sector are backing political ambitions on both sides of the aisle.

On a national scale, the election in Montana is considered a gauge of President Trump’s influence, with whom Gianforte has aligned his political views since Trump’s win. The president made a robocall on behalf of Gianforte, and Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, campaigned with him last month. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has stumped for Quist.

The millionair­e businessma­n’s anti-abortion views, his support of Focus on the Family and the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation and his family foundation’s contributi­ons to the creationis­t institutio­n Glendive Dinosaur and Fossil Museum run to the polar-opposite of tech.

“It’s as much about winning seats (for Democrats) as an anti-Gianforte initiative,” says Jessica Alter, an entreprene­ur who cofounded Tech for Campaigns, a San Francisco and New York nonprofit that has helped the Quist campaign by matching its highly skilled workers in social media marketing and data analysis.

“But we obviously don’t approve of his views on abortion and health care (he opposes the Affordable Care Act).”

Late Wednesday, a reporter for Britain’s The Guardian newspaper claimed he was “body slammed” by Gianforte after he tried to interview the candidate, a scenario corroborat­ed by a Fox News reporter in the same room. Gianforte denied the charges, detailing a different series of events. The local county sheriff said its investigat­ion determined there was probable cause to cite Gianforte for misdemeano­r assault, and three Montana newspapers pulled their endorsemen­t.

The Gianforte campaign did not reply to an email seeking comment.

In a statement, the campaign blamed the “aggressive behavior from a liberal journalist.”

Gianforte, 56, who failed in his bid for governor last year while distancing himself from thencandid­ate Trump, made his money far from the great outdoors of Montana. It was in Silicon Valley that RightNow gained fame before it was bought by Oracle. But Gianforte built the company in Bozeman without external help or capital. He shared his business philosophy in his book, Bootstrapp­ing Your Business: Start and Grow a Successful Company.

“He was focused, hard-driving and assertive as any good CEO should be,” said Sabrina Horn, a communicat­ions executive who worked with Gianforte in the early 2000s.

Others who knew him in the tech industry as he grew Right- Now also describe him as assertive, as well as charming. But he could also hold a grudge and manifested flashes of anger — especially if you disagreed.

Esteban Kolsky, a former tech analyst, remembered him as a “charming, down-to-Earth guy,” who hosted him at his Montana estate, where they dined on bear, mountain lion and beaver the tech exec had killed. But Kolsky says the relationsh­ip soured after he criticized the software, with Gianforte yelling at him, then cutting off access to the company for several years.

“He operates through intimidati­on,” Kolsky recalled. “The worst thing you can say to him is ‘No’ or ‘You’re wrong.’ ”

Still, the image of the physically imposing Gianforte slamming a reporter to the ground is hard for those who know him to imagine.

“Back then he was great with reporters. He was always eager to talk to any reporter,” says Mark Coker, who handled PR for Gianforte in the 1990s.”

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES ??
JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES

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