'She came to my wedding': Kamala Harris tech ties complicate Trump's effort to win over Silicon Valley

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Vice President Kamala Harris has immediately complicated Republican efforts to win over Silicon Valley converts.

Donald Trump tallied millions in donations from tech-world figures in recent months. But Democrats have long held an advantage there and the new presumptive Democratic nominee has especially deep connections to this community and its pocketbooks.

How this plays out in the months ahead could make things, at the very least, awkward, even for some of Trump's most ardent supporters.

"She came to my wedding," Trevor Traina, one of the tech world figures leading the charge for Trump, said in a recent interview. He is the founder and chairman of digital wallet app Kresus Labs and was ambassador to Austria under Trump.

Traina helped organize a recent high-profile Silicon Valley fundraiser for the former president at the home of billionaire David Sacks that raised $12 million.

His support for Trump isn't wavering, he said, but he also declined to criticize Harris personally in the recent conversation.

"Kamala is a dear friend of mine, and I like her very much," he said before adding: "It's just that in today's world, candidates who want to be successful on the left have to toe the line on the whole Elizabeth Warren school of thought."

TOPSHOT - US Vice President and Democratic Presidential candidate Kamala Harris waves as she boards Air Force Two at Indianapolis International Airport in Indianapolis, Indiana, on July 24, 2024. Harris travels to Houston, Texas, where she is scheduled to speak at a teachers union on July 25. (Photo by KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI / AFP) (Photo by KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris waves as she boards Air Force Two in Indianapolis on July 24. (KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images) (KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI via Getty Images)

Others said a change is afoot inside the center of the tech universe as Harris has quickly consolidated the public support of existing Democratic mega-donors and a new open letter from "VCs for Kamala" has over 400 signatures.

Her campaign also raised over $200 million in national grassroots donations in her first week of the race.

"The change from Biden to Harris has absolutely shifted the environment in Silicon Valley," said Box CEO Aaron Levie in a recent post on X.

The well-known Democratic donor added that some "were on the sidelines or wouldn't have been all that energized, but that has changed now."

Another indication of possible Harris momentum in Silicon Valley was a reader survey by the Information that found a jump in tech-world support for Harris.

Harris's ties to Silicon Valley even extend to the familial.

Her niece is Meena Harris, who used to work at Uber (UBER) and wrote a children's book about her aunt. She's married to Nikolas Ajagu, who, according to Linkedin, was formerly an executive at Facebook (META).

Trump, meanwhile, is clearly not going to cede any gained ground without a fight.

On Monday, GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance visited Palo Alto for a sold-out fundraiser, according to an invitation posted online.

Vance boasts his own bevy of Silicon Valley contacts from a stint as a San Francisco venture capitalist and was back in the region for a fundraising lunch in the nearby town of Coalinga on Wednesday.

ST CLOUD, MINNESOTA - JULY 28: Republican vice presidential nominee U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) pays for a breakfast order as he and his family greet supporters at the Park Diner on July 28, 2024 in St Cloud, Minnesota. Vance joined U.S. Republican Presidential nominee former President Donald Trump for a campaign rally last night in Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)
Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) pays for a breakfast order on July 28 during a stop in St Cloud, Minn. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images) (Stephen Maturen via Getty Images)

Harmeet Dhillon is a California lawyer and the former vice chairwoman of the California Republican Party who shared this week's invitation. Like many in the area, she crossed paths with Harris, once representing opposite sides in litigation.

She said in a recent interview that Harris's potential to shake up this aspect of the race is being overblown.

"She lives in Silicon Valley, but ... she's not part of the tech community," Dhillon said of Harris, arguing "no one's authentically a cheerleader for Kamala Harris other than her immediate family members."

Dhillon also strongly disputes the notion that Harris could be friendlier to Big Tech than Biden. She is most focused on the Harris record when it comes to other issues like crime, which she said could be more determinative among the safety-conscious tech community.

And Vance's selection has also already led to a thaw of sorts between the Trump campaign and one key tech billionaire: PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel.

Vance used to work for Thiel and the billionaire, in a recent New York Times interview, signaled new warmth for Trump while also remaining noncommittal about jumping into the 2024 race financially.

A possible tech agenda for Harris, if she wins this fall, is also being looked at closely.

Harris rose to national prominence in San Francisco and was known during her time in California for having a modestly collegial relationship with Big Tech. Donations from some of Silicon Valley's most prominent figures and their employees fueled her early runs for office, especially her 2016 Senate victory.

And during her time as California attorney general, Harris often looked at tech issues but ended up focused on voluntary agreements with companies as she sought their cooperation on issues like sex trafficking online.

MENLO PARK, CA - FEBRUARY 10:  Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg (L) gestures towards California Attorney General Kamala Harris (R) during a Safer Internet Day event at Facebook headquarters on February 10, 2015 in Menlo Park, California. Harris delivered the keynote speech at the event, designed to promote safe, effective use of the internet and mobile technology. Safer Internet Day is celebrated annually in more than 100 countries on the the second Tuesday in February.  (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Then Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg appeared with then California Attorney General Kamala Harris at a "Safer Internet" event at Facebook headquarters in 2015 in Menlo Park, Calif. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) (Justin Sullivan via Getty Images)

Even during her 2020 presidential race, when Harris veered left on a variety of issues, she declined to call for the breakup of Big Tech as her rivals, Sens. Warren and Bernie Sanders, did. She focused on regulating the giants around issues like online privacy.

Harris has focused on AI during her years as vice president and offered a similar approach focused on largely voluntary agreements as Washington begins to grapple with the technology.

In a speech in London last November, Harris called out companies and accused some of choosing profit over safety.

But at the same time, she often courted AI business leaders and convened CEOs to discuss the issues. This helped shepherd a wave of voluntary business-world commitments to some of the plans from top companies like Adobe (ADBE), IBM (IBM), and Nvidia (NVDA).

Harris has offered little in the way of public commentary on tech issues since entering the race but is expected to tout Biden accomplishments popular in tech circles like the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, which is sending billions to semiconductor companies.

A focus on those issues could be amplified further if Sen. Mark Kelly is picked as VP. Kelly has made the semiconductor efforts a centerpiece of his time in the Senate and helped shepherd much of the money to the swing state of Arizona that he represents.

BLETCHLEY, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 2: (First row L-R) France's Minister for Economy, Finance, Industry and Digital Security Bruno Le Maire, German Economy and Climate Minister Robert Habeck, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Australia's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence Richard Marles, (Middle + Back row L-R) Google's James Manyika, Tino Cuellar, President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Amba Kak, AI Now Institute, Arthur Mensch, Mistal AI, Adam Selipsky, Amazon Web Services, Nick Clegg, Meta, Yoshu Bengio, Yoshua Bengio, founder and scientific director of Mila at the Quebec AI Institute, Dario Amodei, Anthropic, Sam Altman, OpenAI, Microsoft's Brad Smith, Mustafa Suleyman, Inflection AI, Alondra Nelson, Harold F. Linder Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Demis Hassabis, Google DeepMind, Eric Schmidt, Schmidt Futures, Ian Hogarth, chair of the UK frontier AI taskforce and Reid Hoffman, Inflection AI, pose for a family photo on the second day of the UK Artificial Intelligence (AI) Safety Summit at Bletchley Park on November 2, 2023 in Bletchley, England. The UK Government are hosting the AI Safety Summit bringing together international governments, leading AI companies, civil society groups and experts in research to consider the risks of AI, especially at the frontier of development, and discuss how they can be mitigated through internationally coordinated action. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Kamala Harris poses with officials including officials from Google, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and Meta, as well as Sam Altman of OpenAI on the second day of the UK AI Safety Summit in November 2023 in Bletchley, England. (Leon Neal/Getty Images) (Leon Neal via Getty Images)

Trump, meanwhile, is set to keep focused on the mashup of vocal tech-world venture capital figures and crypto libertarians he has assembled behind his candidacy.

"You are going to be very happy with me," Trump told an audience of bitcoin enthusiasts last weekend, arguing that across tech issues like cryptocurrency and AI "we understand it, they don't understand it."

As for Traina, he expects that many of Trump's inroads in Silicon Valley will be durable as Trump-leaning technology figures are increasingly comfortable speaking out.

That is going to continue to allow Trump, he says, to access a "silent majority [in Silicon Valley] that was at the very least centrist, if not slightly right of center, but who were apolitical."

Traina himself has donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Trump and to other Republican candidates in 2024. But in yet another example of the complex equation in Silicon Valley at the moment, Traina himself had a very small role in the political rise of his former wedding guest.

According to election records, he sent Kamala Harris a $1,500 check back in 2015.

Ben Werschkul is Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance.

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