Washington  Post
 
The secretive brain trust of Silicon Valley  insiders who are helping Trump
 
 
By _Elizabeth Dwoskin_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/elizabeth-dwoskin/)  
November 21,  2016
 
 
 
Billionaire tech investor Peter Thiel is  putting together a brain trust of 
Silicon Valley insiders to share ideas with  the transition team for 
President-elect Donald Trump. But he’s having trouble  finding takers. 
In recent days, the Facebook board member and  PayPal cofounder - who is 
also a member of the Trump transition - has been  appealing to fellow 
entrepreneurs of all political stripes to share their best  ideas and possibly 
join 
the incoming administration. 
Thiel has been carrying around an iPad with an  editable list of possible 
candidates, say people familiar with Thiel’s thinking  who did not want to be 
named because the venture capitalist has not made his  effort public. Those 
who have been approached by Thiel have been asked to add  other names to 
the shortlist. 
Thiel, a libertarian who was shunned by his  tech industry peers for being 
a Trump supporter, is pitching his personal  network of entrepreneurs on the 
opportunity to influence an incoming  administration that is somewhat of a 
blank slate when it comes to technology  policy. Because Trump had so few 
ties to the world of tech, Thiel will have an  unusually powerful influence on 
the new administration, the people familiar with  his thinking said. 
But in the liberal bastion of Silicon Valley —  where Trump is despised and 
even admitting you’re a Republican can hurt your  candidacy for a job – 
that coveted opportunity has been fraught with challenges.  And some people 
have turned him down altogether. Thiel declined to  comment. 
People who have joined Thiel form a tight-knit  group of conservative and 
libertarian-leaning entrepreneurs who have long felt  ostracized in Silicon 
Valley for their political views, a source said. Many are  excited to finally 
have a voice in government. 
Some entrepreneurs who had not been  politically active said the 
opportunity was too good to pass up. “The chance to  influence the government 
is a 
huge opportunity,” said Jack Abraham, a serial  entrepreneur who is executive 
director of the Thiel Fellowship. “There are  people who 
 
are repulsed by Trump, and it’s understandable  - Silicon Valley is very 
liberal. But it’s unfortunate [that some people don’t  want to contribute] 
because this is a unique opportunity for smart people to  inject ideas.” 
Others who spoke to the Washington Post said  people Thiel approached were 
conflicted: Thiel is revered throughout Silicon  Valley for his business 
acumen, even by those who disagree with his politics. In  any other 
circumstance, being tapped by someone of his stature to have a voice  at the 
highest 
levels of power would be hugely appealing. 
Entrepreneurs working in emerging areas that  the government has yet to 
fully regulate, such as the virtual currency bitcoin  and drones, see the value 
in having a line to an administration that so far has  had few ties in the 
tech world. 
But people who have turned Thiel down felt  Trump’s campaign had been too 
divisive and that an association with Trump could  have toxic repercussions 
in their social and business circles, several people  said. 
The reaction in Silicon Valley reflects  a broader dilemma for the incoming 
administration: Many of the best and  brightest are wary of contributing to 
the incoming government because they fear  the ramifications of having ties 
to Trump. These concerns have played out in  recent days among  
People on Thiel’s shortlist include Blake  Masters, who co-authored, with 
Thiel, the book Zero to One, which is read as a  business bible in Silicon 
Valley. Masters is also president of the Thiel  Foundation, an organization 
dedicated to funding young people who want to skip  college to pursue an 
entrepreneurial idea. 
Other Thiel mentees have been tapped,  including Joe Lonsdale and Abraham. 
Like Masters, Lonsdale met Thiel while he  was a libertarian-leaning 
Stanford student, and co-founded the data-mining  startup Palantir Technologies 
with Thiel. Abraham is executive director of the  Thiel Foundation, and Thiel's 
ties to Abraham include sitting on the board of  his startup Zenreach. 
Balaji Srinivasan, whose startup focusing on  the virtual currency bitcoin 
received funding from Thiel, shares some of his  anti-authoritarian ideals. 
Thiel has advocated for technologists to live in  offshore ships that would 
function as mini-nations to escape regulation;  Srinivasan once advocated 
for technologists to exit the United States and form a  separate society that 
would govern itself. 
Masters and Srinivasan did not respond to  requests for comment. Lonsdale 
declined to comment. 
Max Levchin, another PayPal cofounder who is  an outspoken critic of Trump, 
has contributed ideas and suggested others for the  shortlist, but does not 
want to join the administration, a source close to  Levchin said. Levchin 
is on the advisory board at the Consumer Financial  Protection Bureau, the 
watchdog agency created by the Obama administration to  police financial 
institutions. Levchin declined to comment. 
In speeches leading up to the election, Thiel  has pushed for a government 
agenda that includes greater investments in science  and technology. He gave 
a $1.25 million donation to political groups supporting  Trump. 
Thiel is also a backer of many companies that  have pending business with 
Washington. He’s funded the ride-sharing company Lyft  and home-sharing 
company Airbnb, which have been in the crosshairs with  regulators and unions. 
He 
also has backed a marijuana business and a drone  maker, areas that federal 
regulators are scrutinizing. 
The people close to Thiel said he had also  told Trump’s team about the 
challenges startups had in doing business with the  federal government. The 
issue is close to Thiel:  Palantir, which Thiel co-founded, recently won a 
legal case against  the Department of Defense, in which the company claimed 
that 
it was sidelined  from competing for government contracts.

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