Trump victory bursts Silicon Valley bubble

Donald J. Trump was elected the 45th president of the United States late Tuesday in a victory that stunned much of the US and the world. The shockwaves were perhaps most felt in the homes, offices and wired cafes of Silicon Valley.

The two dozen executives, founders and investors Yahoo Finance reached out to for this story — many of whom declined to speak on the record — uniformly voiced surprise and disbelief.

“Like many, I’m surprised by the outcome,” conceded Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of the cryptocurrency startup Ripple. “But I’m also embracing the hope that President Trump is far more inclusive and positive than Candidate Trump.”

Other members of the tech community appeared somewhat less enthused about their next president. Indeed, if Silicon Valley exists in a bubble, it’s not merely a financial bubble, but also a cultural bubble — an industry diametrically opposed to many American voters and the values and issues that Trump made the centerpiece of his campaign platform.

“I think the technology industry tends to be optimistic and more economically advantaged,” says Susan Etlinger, an industry analyst at the San Francisco-based Altimeter Group. “Tech tends to congregate in cities. None of these attributes mirror what we saw in the results of the election.”

The San Francisco Bay Area tech community generally leans Democrat or Libertarian, albeit with a greater focus on social issues, with pro-immigration and pro-trade positions. Indeed, roughly 50% of the country’s “unicorns” — private companies with $1 billion-plus valuations — have at least one immigrant founder at the helm, according to a report this March from the National Foundation For American Policy. This illustrates the increasing importance of contributions of immigrants to the US economy, particularly to tech.

Tech workers from overseas sometimes come to the US on an H-1B visa, which lets companies employee foreign workers for graduate-level occupations like engineering. While Hillary Clinton had vowed to uphold the H-1B visa, a Trump administration would possibly restrict the number of workers who enter the country with an H-1B visa — the same kind of visa his wife Melania received in 1996 to legally work in the U.S.

Over 500 people turned up for the election night viewing party held by Sean Parker's civics-focused startup Brigade, based in San Francisco. The last of the crowd filtered out around 12:30 a.m. following Donald Trump's victory speech. Source: Brigade
Over 500 people turned up for the election night viewing party held by Sean Parker's civics-focused startup Brigade, based in San Francisco. The last of the crowd filtered out around 12:30 a.m. following Donald Trump's victory speech. Source: Brigade

The prospect of President Trump, who has proposed building an “impenetrable physical wall” on the southern border and made controversial comments about women, immigrants and the physically handicapped, is perhaps the largest driver behind Silicon Valley becoming the most politicized it has ever been around a presidential election. Indeed, billionaire PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel distinguished himself from much of the rest of the tech community simply by donating to Trump’s campaign.