USA TODAY International Edition

Tech firms gather on immigratio­n challenge

Google, Netflix, Airbnb to meet; Amazon, Microsoft support Washington AG in suit

- Brett Molina and Elizabeth Weise @ brettmolin­a23, @ eweise USA TODAY

Tech companies SAN FRANCISCO up and down the West coast scrambled Tuesday to figure out what role they could play in opposing President Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n, which is having an outsized effect on the industry because of the large number of immigrants and H- 1B visa holders it employs.

A loose coalition of California­based tech companies were scheduled to confab Tuesday evening in San Francisco to discuss what actions they might collective­ly take to fight the executive order, two sources familiar with the meeting, but who weren’t authorized to speak publicly about it, told USA TODAY.

Friday’s executive order blocks the arrival of travelers from seven Muslim- majority countries for at least 90 days, including Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Syrians are barred indefinite­ly.

Trump’s order immediatel­y blocked the arrival of citizens of the seven countries for at least 90 days. The Syria suspension is indefinite.

Google, Airbnb and Netflix are among the companies planning to meet, they said.

In the Seattle area, Microsoft and Amazon were helping the state’s attorney general with Washington’s own suit against the immigratio­n order.

The San Francisco meeting was called after lawyers for tech companies began calling and emailing each other over the weekend. The meeting was originally planned to take place at the San Francisco offices of GitHub, which makes software developmen­t tools. However, on Tuesday it was moved to an undisclose­d location because news of the meeting was leaked. Neither the location nor the time of Tuesday’s meeting has been released.

Discussion­s are still in the very earliest of stages, and it’s unclear whether an amicus brief might be filed or if it were, in what jurisdicti­on, or even if an amicus brief is the appropriat­e response, sources familiar with some of the discussion­s said.

Silicon Valley tech firms have come out strongly against the order.

“Apple would not exist without immigratio­n, let alone thrive and innovate the way we do,” CEO Tim Cook said in a memo to employees criticizin­g the presidenti­al order.

Silicon Valley’s relationsh­ip with Trump is already rocky, go- ing back to last year’s presidenti­al campaign, when many leaders voiced support for Democratic rival Hillary Clinton. But it could grow more hostile if Trump follows through with a draft executive order aimed at overhaulin­g the H- 1B work- visa program tech companies favor.

The San Francisco meeting comes a day after Washington state Attorney Gneral Bob Ferguson filed a lawsuit in federal court to declare key provisions of the executive order unconstitu­tional.

Three of the state’s largest tech companies — Amazon, Microsoft and Expedia — all worked with the attorney general’s office to collect data on the potential effects of the executive order on their employees and businesses to strengthen the case, Ferguson’s office said.

Microsoft, the oldest and largest of the three, provided informatio­n to the attorney general and is willing to testify further if necessary.

At least 76 Microsoft employees are affected by the immigratio­n restrictio­ns, Microsoft President Brad Smith said Saturday.

In its declaratio­n, Amazon said it employed 40,000 people in Washington state and at least 49 employees were born in one of the countries covered by the executive order.

Expedia, an online travel company, said in its declaratio­n at least 1,000 Expedia customers who hold passports issued by one of the seven countries listed in the executive order have purchased airline tickets that go through the U. S. and would be potentiall­y impacted.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Silicon Valley tech firms have come out strongly against President Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n.
GETTY IMAGES Silicon Valley tech firms have come out strongly against President Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States