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In Zoom party for Harris, VCs break out checkbooks and take jabs at A16Z's Trump boosters

"We don't need to do due diligence on this candidate," said Ron Conway on a Zoom call for tech investors who support Kamala Harris for president.

US Vice President Kamala Harris.
US Vice President Kamala Harris.
  • Tech investors raised around $135,000 for Democratic presidential hopeful Kamala Harris over Zoom.
  • Speakers included Ron Conway, Reid Hoffman, and Roy Bahat.
  • The Zoom call made plenty of cloaked references to Trump's allies at the firm Andreessen Horowitz.
Tech investors are well-versed in raising money over Zoom. On Wednesday, they put their skills to work for Democratic presidential hopeful Kamala Harris.
Reid Hoffman, a Greylock partner, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Reid Hoffman.
The group "VCs for Kamala," which published an open letter in support of Harris a week ago, held a virtual fundraising party with about 600 guests.
Leslie Feinzaig, a founding partner of Graham & Walker, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for supporters of Kamala Harris.
Leslie Feinzaig, a founding partner of Graham & Walker, served as emcee.
Ron Conway, venture's standard-bearer for the Democratic party, kicked off the call with a pledge to match donations up to $50,000.
Ron Conway speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture investors who support Kamala Harris for president.
Ron Conway.
"We don't need to do due diligence on this candidate," said Conway, adding he's known Harris for 20 years.
A man wearing black-rimmed glasses and a white dress shirt.
Ron Conway.
"This candidate is absolutely qualified and we don't need to bicker among ourselves about who's for and who's against," Conway said.
Kamala Harris
Kamala Harris.
He shared a document telling investors how they can get involved, answering the age-old question, "How can I help?"
During a virtual call, Ron Conway shares a guide on how venture investors can help get Kamala Harris elected as the next president.
He said Emerson Collective, founded by Laurene Powell Jobs, created the guide.
Laurene Powell Jobs
Laurene Powell Jobs.
Roy Bahat, the head of Bloomberg Beta, made the case for Harris as America's next president, speaking in their "common language."
Roy Bahat speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture investors who support Kamala Harris for president.
Roy Bahat.
He presented a pitch deck.
Roy Bahat presents a pitch deck on a virtual call for venture investors who support Kamala Harris for president.
Roy Bahat.
"She's normal," Bahat said. "She's a person who makes decisions like we do. She's going to make the country stable and the conditions that she'll create in this country will help startups to thrive."
Roy Bahat, head of Bloomberg Capital, shares a pitch deck on why venture investors should support Kamala Harris for president.
Roy Bahat.
"The competition is funded by Andreessen Horowitz and some other funds, but we all know more capital isn't necessarily the thing that makes the difference. It's that plus a plan for execution."
Roy Bahat, head of Bloomberg Beta, presents a slide deck during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Roy Bahat.
Twenty minutes into the call, a mystery donor contributed $25,000, bringing the funds raised to $125,000, including Conway's match.
Kamala Harris at podium
Kamala Harris.
The Zoom call had plenty of cloaked references to Trump's allies in Silicon Valley.
Marc Andreessen on a panel at the Fortune Global Forum
Marc Andreessen.
Mac Conwell, the Baltimore-based founder of RareBreed Ventures, noted that this group of venture investors for Harris formed "in response to a large VC firm saying they were speaking for VCs."
Mac Conwell, the Baltimore-based founder of RareBreed Ventures, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Mac Conwell.
The founders of Andreessen Horowitz have explained their choice to support Trump came down to a few issues, including taxes and crypto regulation.
ben horowitz cofounder andreessen horowitz a16z.JPG
Ben Horowitz.
Their firm "would have us believe that folks who are backing Kamala Harris are anti-capitalist," said Stephen DeBerry, who runs the Bay Area venture firm Bronze.
Stephen DeBerry, who runs the Bronze Venture Fund, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Stephen DeBerry.
"We're not opposed to profits, we're not opposed to high growth. That's what drives us," he continued. "We're not opposed to billionaires. There are several of them on this call."
A screenshot of a chat message shows Amy Kalokerinos, a former partner at Andreessen Horowitz, saying, "ex a16z partner here and proud!"
Amy Kalokerinos, who worked as a partner at Andreessen Horowitz from 2015 to 2018, posted her support in the chat.
"What we are opposed to is building a regulatory regime that guts our government and pulls out safeties so that the system can't withstand itself and it collapses and therefore the wealth in the system is aggregated to only a few and we become an oligopoly society like Russia," he said.
Stephen DeBerry, who runs Bronze Venture Fund, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Stephen DeBerry.
Greylock partner Reid Hoffman closed out the call with some fiery remarks.
Reid Hoffman, a Greylock partner, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Reid Hoffman.
"Part of the way that I describe Trump is he's a reality television star who is so bad at business, he could lose money running a casino," he said.
Trump Plaza Casino sign
Electricians remove the signage of Trump Plaza Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, after its collapse.
He made a case for Harris as the pro-business candidate, pointing to her capacity to solidify America's global strength and her familiarity with the needs of the tech industry.
Reid Hoffman, a Greylock partner and LinkedIn cofounder, speaks on-camera during a virtual fall for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Reid Hoffman.
Hoffman took a jab at the A16Z founders, saying, "people who worry about little corner cases in crypto or taxation or regulation are missing the fundamental importance of a stable, unifying force both domestically and internationally."
Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn cofounder and a Greylock partner, speaks on-camera during a virtual call for venture supporters of Kamala Harris.
Reid Hoffman.
"Kamala Harris is definitely the blue lightsaber in this election," Hoffman said.
Kamala Harris
Kamala Harris.
By the call's end, 98 investors had donated roughly $135,000 to the Harris-Walz campaign.
A screenshot of a Zoom call shows Leslie Feinzaig speaking.
Leslie Feinzaig.
The next gathering of venture investors for Harris will take place on September 4, "conveniently after Burning Man," said a group organizer.
A crowd of dancers at Burning Man festival, surrounding a metal sculpture of an octopus shooting flames mounted on a car
Attendees dance during the annual Burning Man Festival in the early morning of September 5, 2023.
Read the original article on Business Insider

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