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Silicon Valley execs meet with Trump

Executives greeted with effusive praise

- By Evan Halper and David Pierson Washington Bureau Evan Halper reported from Washington and David Pierson from Los Angeles. evan.halper@latimes.com

President-elect eschews confrontat­ional tone and focuses on innovation and trade with group of CEOs from tech giants.

WASHINGTON — It wasn’t so much a reckoning as a reboot.

The nation’s top tech executives couldn’t know what to expect when they headed to Trump Tower in Manhattan on Wednesday for what the presidente­lect’s transition team had billed as an innovation “summit.” They had reason to fear an ambush.

But if Trump holds grudges against Silicon Valley for the way many of its denizens maligned and ridiculed him at every step of the presidenti­al campaign, he worked hard to not let them show.

If Trump’s opening comments were any indication, this was no repeat of that ill-fated meeting Trump called with broadcast and cable TV news executives days after the election, during which he mostly dressed them down.

If any grudges were in the air, they were over who was not in the 25th floor meeting room on Wednesday.

Trump’s favorite social media platform, Twitter, was absent, for example. Politico attributed it to retributio­n for the company refusing during the campaign to abide Trump’s request to generate a #CrookedHil­lary emoji.

Trump representa­tives denied that was why Twitter was left out of the high tech confab. They said Twitter didn’t make the cut because it wasn’t a big enough company. It has a market capitaliza­tion of about $13.8 billion, less than half that of Tesla, which attended the meeting.

Trump himself boasted at the top of the meeting about the deluge of requests to attend.

He looked to PayPal cofounder Peter Thiel, an eccentric billionair­e who was among the lone tech giants to back Trump’s campaign as he sent out invitation­s.

“Peter would sort of say, ‘You know, that company’s too small.’ ”

Those executives that did make the cut, Trump declared, led “monster companies.” They included: Tim Cook of Apple, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Elon Musk of Tesla, Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook and Larry Page and Eric Schmidt of Google parent company Alphabet.

“I’m here to help you folks do well,” Trump said, before taking credit for the bump in the stock market that followed his election. “And you’re doing well right now and I’m very honored by the bounce. They’re all talking about the bounce. So right now everybody in this room has to like me — at least a little bit.”

It was the get-along side of Trump on full display. The meeting was to be a symbol of an administra­tion that would not hew to ideology but the best ideas.

Plenty of folks back in Silicon Valley weren’t buying it. The executives who flew to New York found themselves confronted with letters, petitions and public scoldings from colleagues who reminded them that Trump has yet to disavow any parts of his agenda that most appalled Silicon Valley during the election.

“Now, more than ever, tech leaders must stand up for human dignity, and examine their role in public discourse,” eBay founder Pierre Omidyar wrote as he retweeted an article that pilloried tech leaders for going to Trump Tower.

Nearly two dozen advocacy groups, including Amnesty Internatio­nal USA and Democracy for America, demanded to know why most of the companies at the meeting are refusing to pledge to not help Trump build any type of registry for Muslims, as he suggested during the campaign.

More than 640 tech workers, many of them from firms represente­d at the Trump Tower meeting, vowed to undermine any “creation of databases of identifyin­g informatio­n for the United States government to target individual­s based on race, religion, or national origin.”

Reports from inside the meeting room suggest the tech leaders did not heed the call for confrontat­ion. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, whose ownership of The Washington Post made him an occasional focus of Trump’s ire during the campaign, declared the meeting “very productive.”

“I shared my view that the administra­tion should make innovation one of its key pillars, which would create a huge number of jobs across the whole country,” Bezos said in a statement.

Trump showered the group with praise. And before reporters were ushered out of the room, he made a point of assuaging their concerns about his threats to slap tariffs on companies that manufactur­e their products abroad, as most big Silicon Valley firms do.

“We’re going to make it a lot easier for you to trade across borders,” Trump told them.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Larry Page of Google parent Alphabet, Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and Vice President-elect Mike Pence listen to President-elect Donald Trump at meeting of tech industry leaders at Trump Tower on Wednesday.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Larry Page of Google parent Alphabet, Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and Vice President-elect Mike Pence listen to President-elect Donald Trump at meeting of tech industry leaders at Trump Tower on Wednesday.

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