Some top tech leaders have embraced Trump. That's created a political divide in Silicon Valley
Source: AP
Updated 1:45 PM EDT, April 13, 2025
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Like many in the tech industry, Jeremy Lyons used to think of himself as a relatively apolitical guy. The only time he had participated in a demonstration before now was in the opening days of Donald Trumps first presidential term, when he joined fellow Google workers walking out of the companys Silicon Valley campus to protest immigration restrictions. Googles co-founder and its chief executive officer joined them.
Last weekend was Lyons second, also against Trump, but it had a very different feel. The man directing thousands of marchers with a bullhorn in downtown San Jose on April 5 was another tech worker who would not give his full name for fear of being identified by Trump backers. Marchers were urged not to harass drivers of Tesla vehicles, which have gone from a symbol of Silicon Valleys environmental futurism to a pro-Trump icon. And no tech executives were anywhere to be seen, only months after several had joined Trump at his January inauguration.
To Lyons, 54, the change says as much about whats happened to Silicon Valley over the past quarter-century as it does about the atmosphere of fear surrounding many Trump critics nowadays. One of the things Ive seen over that time is a shift from a nerdy utopia to a money first, move fast and break things, Lyons said.
Political gap seen between tech leaders and their workforce
The tech industrys political allegiances remain divided. But as some in the upper echelons of Silicon Valley began shifting to the right politically, many of the tech industrys everyday workers have remained liberal but also increasingly nervous and disillusioned. Their mood is in stark contrast to the prominent tech leaders who have embraced a conservative populist ideology.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/silicon-valley-tech-workers-musk-trump-billionaires-b968a67889a2430d4906108fb7d28f8a

paulkienitz
(1,404 posts)And I suspect that the new generation of "brogrammers" seeking their chance to work there includes a lot of red-pilly sociopaths who just want to be there because it's a path into the new ruling class, not because they are drawn to engineering.
slightlv
(5,393 posts)I remember when computers and electronics were fun, and information gleaned was freely shared with everyone around you. I feel really old these days...
EastBayGuy
(140 posts)I'm retired but my first job in the 80s was working on an original IBM PC with Lotus 1-2-3. What a wonder that was.
usonian
(17,121 posts)Not every SV person agrees.
See second link and the PDF there.
'Reboot' Revealed: Elon Musk's CEO-Dictator Playbook
https://www.thenerdreich.com/reboot-elon-musk-ceo-dictator-doge/
Silicon Valley Whistleblowers Warn Elon Musk Hijacking Republicans to Control Entire US Government
https://bylinetimes.com/2025/02/07/silicon-valley-whistleblowers-warn-elon-musk-hijacking-republicans-to-control-entire-us-government/
Like Project 2025, it was all spelled out a while back.
OldBaldy1701E
(7,667 posts)"Their mood is in stark contrast to the prominent tech leaders who have embraced a conservative populist ideology unfettered greed."
Now, it is more accurate.