Conservatives blame Silicon Valley Bank collapse on 'diversity' and 'woke' issues
NBC News · David Paul Morris

As the government races to contain the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, conservatives are seizing on the rescue as a “Biden bailout” for a “woke” bank that caters to Democratic donors in "Big Tech."

While the GOP was traditionally aligned with business, its ascendant populist wing seems more interested in punishing corporations on the wrong side of the culture wars than in stabilizing the industry — at least while the party is out of power and doesn’t bear responsibility for the fallout.

“Republicans will likely frame this bankruptcy and subsequent bailout as class warfare. It’s East Palestine versus Silicon Valley,” said Sam Geduldig, a Republican lobbyist, referring to the site of a recent train crash in Ohio that Republicans accused the Biden administration of ignoring. “We can’t get into a situation where there’s red banks and blue banks, and unfortunately, that’s exactly where we are.”

Geduldig noted, for instance, that Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, the chairman of the Banking Committee, faces a tough re-election next year. “Republican campaign operatives are absolutely going to prosecute the case that Brown gave nothing to East Palestine and everything to Silicon Valley Bank.”

Bank failures aren’t especially uncommon — there have been 565 since 2000, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., typically several every year, even in non-recession times.

But Silicon Valley Bank was uniquely positioned to spark a political firestorm, given its centrality to the tech sector.

And the failure pushes several political hot buttons all at once: concerns about the power of Big Tech from both sides of the aisle, populist anger at bailouts, battles over corporate cultures that prioritize issues like diversity and the environment, and traditional economic concerns about regulation, government intervention, spending and inflation.

It’s the biggest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis, when government bailouts sparked the right-wing tea party revolt — history President Joe Biden seems to be trying to avoid repeating by, this time, saying taxpayer dollars won’t be used and insisting that those responsible will be held accountable.

But Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley still called it a “Biden bailout,” warning that while a pot of money that banks pay into may cover costs for now, taxpayers would be on the hook if it runs dry. “Joe Biden is pretending this isn’t a bailout. It is,” she said.

Others argued the failure was a result of "President Biden and congressional Democrats’ reckless spending," as Alfredo Ortiz, the CEO of Job Creators Network, a conservative business group, put it, which he said drove up inflation, forcing the Federal Reserve to raise rates, which devalued older U.S. Treasury bonds held by the bank.