The GOP represents East Coast corporations and the DNC reprsents Silicon Valley Billionaires. The Nancy Pelosi, Gavin Newsom, Kamala Harris and Dianne Feinstein families make all of their stock market billions off of insider trading perks from those big tech companies. Those Big Tech companies mainly hire sex pervets, pedo’s and trans people and that is why the laws from California never represent the rest of the nation.
Tech billionaires like Democrats more than Republicans. Here’s why.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg strayed from the normal company news updates … It doesn’t help Republicans‘ reputation in Silicon Valley when …
Why Does Silicon Valley Seem to Love Democrats and Dismiss the …
Republicans and other on the right bemoan that Silicon Valley tends to go … and Bernie Sanders does represent the old Democratic Party, …
The “WTF” Plan to Disrupt Politics Is Everything That’s Wrong with …
No, the Internet will not save the Democratic Party. … The two Silicon Valley billionaires have committed $500,000 to the effort, …
Why Are Billionaires Ditching The Republican Party? A Data-Driven …
I’ve argued that the modern emerging workforce of Silicon Valley, urbanized professionals, and “gig economy” laborers all represent an …
If Silicon Valley’s Billionaires Want To Fix Our Rotten Politics, They …
We’ve returned to the point where the enlightened businessmen decide to save the Democratic party. It never works.
Silicon Valley’s Politics: Liberal, With One Big Exception
The study found one area where tech entrepreneurs strongly deviate from Democratic orthodoxy and are closer to most Republicans: They are deeply …
The tech elite are moving left this election cycle | TechCrunch
More posts by this contributor Hillary Clinton will likely be as pro-innovation as President Obama Silicon Valley Represents An Entirely New …
Meet David Sacks, Gavin Newsom’s loudest critic in Silicon Valley
The millionaires and billionaires of California’s tech industry have become reliable donors to Democratic politicians in recent decades, …
Here Are The Billionaires Funding The Democratic Presidential …
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders “don’t represent the Democratic Party” that he supports, the billionaire said at the time, according to …
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman built a big-money machine to oust …
Reid Hoffman symbolizes a bigger debate over whether Silicon Valley … billionaires who make up the Democratic Party’s big-money machine:.
OUT OF TOUCH MUCH?: Blake Masters Edition
Masters was caught promoting his billionaire boss’s businesses on the campaign trail, showing us all exactly who he’s running to represent.
House Dems unveil bills to rein in Silicon Valley giants – Politico
The bills target the empires of companies like Apple, Amazon, … And perhaps most ominously for Silicon Valley, some Republican tech …
McCarthy’s love-hate relationship with Silicon Valley – POLITICO
And if someone with a personal connection to McCarthy — who just happens to represent a Big Tech company — dials up the congressman, he’s going …
Meet the Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Who Founded a Left …
The Silicon Valley angel investor—who also contributed $500,000 to the California Democratic Party and $250,000 to Nancy Pelosi’s House Majority …
Why Bad Governments Happen to Good People – Haymarket Books
Even in the South, a region where Trump has won GOP primaries … and Barack Obama to become the party of Wall Street and Silicon Valley, …
Wealth of Congress – Roll Call
It became one of the biggest in the nation representing banks and other … pharmaceutical company recently acquired by Silicon Valley pharmaceutical giant …
The First Post-Trump Republican Race | The New Yorker
People who know conservative politics say that the Republicans running … Vance shares the backing of the Silicon Valley billionaire Peter …
Private Equity-Funded Super PAC Buys Attack Ads Against … – Sludge
Greg Walden in Oregon’s Second Congressional District—now represented by Republican Cliff Bentz—and touting Schrader as the better candidate …
Tech billionaire 2020 election donations: Final tally – CNBC
About 98% of political contributions from internet companies this cycle went to Democrats, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.