Kamala Harris hasn’t said a lot about tech policy, but here’s what we know

  News, Rassegna Stampa
image_pdfimage_print

Vice President Kamala Harris is all but certain to become the Democratic presidential candidate. She was suddenly catapulted to front-runner status for the Democratic presidential nomination after President Joe Biden ended his reelection campaign and endorsed her for the position, and now key power brokers in the party have publicly backed her. If elected, Harris would be a president with roots in California’s Bay Area — the heart of the tech industry. 

Despite her ties to this region, Harris is largely a cipher when it comes to tech policy. As vice president, she is inherently connected to every policy of the Biden administration, but it’s difficult to untangle which parts she would continue and which she would change. Her key focus areas as vice president — including artificial intelligence — and her interests as a senator and, before that, as California’s attorney general and San Francisco’s district attorney, provide a handful of insights into what she might prioritize if she should become president.

We know where she stands on climate, we have some sense of how she feels about privacy, and we have a whole array of tantalizing statements about AI, but there is a wide range of key questions that she has yet to be asked or has successfully avoided answering. She remains an enigma when it comes to tech antitrust and the TikTok ban. And she has yet to speak directly to the issues that most concern the moneyed donor class of Silicon Valley, such as crypto regulation.  

“I think this is a big opportunity for the Democratic Party to do a little bit of introspection and say — where have they lost certain communities?” Box CEO Aaron Levie, who frequently donates to Democratic candidates, told The Verge in an interview. He said the party has seen “missed opportunities” with the tech and business community, like in pushing for taxes on unrealized gains and failing to update the H-1B visa program for high-skilled workers. Ultimately, he hopes for “a bit of a reset on some of either the policy initiatives, or just the the tone and the message from the party.”

For those in the tech industry, Harris’ policy stances are not particularly well known, says venture capitalist and political strategist Bradley Tusk. A campaign manager for Mike Bloomberg’s 2009 mayoral campaign, Tusk says that’s largely because most tech regulation occurs at the state level, “so it’s not like she had this track record in the Senate, simply because they just don’t do very much.” That means there’s a lot to be learned in the next few weeks on where Harris plants her feet on a variety of tech issues. 

The Verge took a look into how the vice president’s background and legislative history could inform what a Harris presidency could mean for tech — the industry, the workforce, and its impact on consumers.

Many of the recent legislative efforts to rein in the power of the largest tech companies gained momentum after Harris left the Senate. She was never one of the more outspoken politicians on antitrust policy to begin with. During the 2020 election, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) was the candidate out front calling for the breakup of big tech companies. Naturally, in 2019, The New York Times asked Harris point-blank whether firms like Amazon, Facebook, and Google should be broken up. Instead of giving a direct answer, she steered the conversation to privacy regulation.

Still, she’s left open the possibility of enforcement. Also that year, she told CNN that “we have to seriously take a look at” breaking up Facebook. She also called the platform “essentially a utility that has gone unregulated.”

The Biden administration’s antitrust policy — as enacted by the enforcers he appointed, such as the Federal Trade Commission’s Lina Khan and the Department of Justice’s Jonathan Kanter — has been aggressive, maybe even unprecedentedly so. It’s not clear whether a Harris administration would keep that up. The question she dodged in 2019 will be increasingly difficult to avoid now that she’s facing down a self-proclaimed tech antitrust advocate in Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. J.D. Vance (OH).

Whichever path Harris chooses, she’ll find some friends in Silicon Valley, which itself has split on the issue of antitrust. (The most direct beneficiaries of antitrust policy, after all, are the rival companies.) “There’s not a dinner that I’ve been at where three people can agree on an antitrust policy,” Levie said. “I have friends that are the most ardent supporters of capitalism, of free markets, that also like what Lina Khan does to keep Big Tech in check.”

When avoiding the Times’ question about breaking up big tech in 2019, Harris said that “the tech companies have got to be regulated in a way that we can ensure and the American consumer can be certain that their privacy is not being compromised.” She added, “My first priority is going to be that we ensure that privacy is something that is intact.”