Big Tech Doesn’t Care About Your Voting Rights

The tech industry’s new Chamber of Progress diverts attention away from thorny tech policy issues

Moe Tkacik
4 min readMar 31, 2021
Delta CEO Ed Bastian spoke out against the Georgia voting law, under threat of boycotts. Photo: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

Two years ago Google fired its chief lobbyist of twelve years, mostly it seems for having been so darn good at his job. Adam Kovacevich was a longtime Joe Lieberman flack and an inveterate astroturf activist: the son of a central California grape grower, he led his first grassroots campaign from his Harvard dorm room, to break the dining hall’s United Farm Worker’s-inspired grape boycott. When he came aboard the Not Yet Evil empire in 2007, Google didn’t even have a dedicated lobbyist, though it was spending all of six figures a year retaining four outside lobbying firms.

Kovacevich centralized operations and turned Google from a lobbying nonentity to a Boeing-esque Beltway juggernaut replete with 100 staffers and its own tax-exempt industrial complex of advocacy groups and think tanks. Correctly anticipating, having flacked through the big antitrust case against Microsoft, that antitrust sticklers would be his biggest antagonists, he built a whole public relations strategy around positioning the company as the consummate facilitator of competition. “Competition is just one click away,” he wrote.

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Moe Tkacik

senior fellow at the American Economic Liberties Project, co-founder of Jezebel, former Wall Street Journal reporter, off-again waitress, mommy