Policy wonks go west and find sharp criticism of Washington's ways from the tech community.LOS ANGELES—The scene was all Hollywood
but the talk was pure Washington
as the Tech Policy Summit—the annual confab of Capitol Hill policy wonks and
the Silicon Valley—opened March 26. It didn't take long
for this year's elections to warm up the crowd.
Meeting in the heart of a Hooray for Hollywood
tourist center at the Hollywood and
Highland complex, the summit drew
early blood with a discussion on what makes a tech president. Most panelists
quickly disqualified President Bush at a late morning session.
Alec Ross, executive vice president of external affairs at One Economy,
tossed some political red meat to the audience by saying, "A tremendous
amount of ground [in global tech competition] has been lost over the last eight
years."
Relating a tale of his company's efforts to bridge the digital divide, Ross
said he pitched Washington on the idea of broadband in public housing, but was
told high-speed Internet connections are considered entertainment and not
essential.
Click here for 10 things the next president should do about IT.
"It's really a simple fix. All the president has to do is to sign an
order," Ross said. "But there was literally no room for this simple
idea at the White House." Although Ross is backing Sen. Barack Obama in
this year's presidential election, he said, "All of the remaining
candidates understand and 'get it' more than the current president."
Andrew Rasiej, the founder of the Personal Democracy Forum and a co-founder
of the popular site techPresident, also was not shy about where he thinks the
U.S. tech sector has gone under President Bush: "We need a complete reboot
of our entire system of governance or we're going to be like farmers and
ranchers who looked at the steam engine and said it would be good for hauling
horses to the fields."
The Bush bashing continued until Tony Perkins, the founder and editor of
AlwaysOn, asked, "Didn't broadband penetration go up over the last eight
years?" Perkins painted his fellow panelists as cynics, noting that Bush
supports opening U.S.
immigration policy to include more H-1B visas, a pet cause of Silicon
Valley.
"[Sen. John] McCain and Bush were lambasted for pursuing an open
immigration policy," said Perkins, who also founded Red Herring magazine
and co-founded the Valley's influential Churchill Club. "Job creation is
the key, and the best president for tech will get out of the way of a free,
unencumbered and unregulated market."
Perkins also took Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton to task for criticizing
free trade agreements that the Silicon Valley strongly
supports. "What you don't want to do is knock down free trade agreements.
Now we have Obama and Hillary going around the country showing how tough they'd
be on NAFTA."
Perkins added, "Whoever is president needs to understand how jobs are
created. They have to be committed to a flat, even playing field."
For all the inflammatory debate, though, former Congressman Rick White
noted, "Tech policy drives zero votes. The president and any
administration are going to focus on what people care about."
After the session, White told eWEEK he sometimes fears that it is not a
matter of Washington getting
tech, but, instead, an issue of tech getting Washington.
For instance, he said, "Tech policy is never going to drive immigration
policy."