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By John Borland
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 24, 2004 7:55:00 PM

SAN JOSE, Calif.--Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry called for tax cuts on long-term investments in start-ups and other small businesses, as part of a speech focusing on his proposed technology policy.

Flanked at a rally here by former Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca, Kerry on Thursday called for a more "innovative economy," with greater investment in broadband Internet technology, science and math education and research.

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What's new:
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry promises investments in research and broadband, plus tax breaks for start-ups and other small businesses, at a rally in Silicon Valley.

Bottom line:
Details of Kerry's technology platform have been long awaited by the Silicon Valley community, which has been avidly courted by both political parties in recent election cycles.

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"Technological revolution is the foundation of a 21st century economy," Kerry said. "But it's up to us to build on that foundation, so we can create and expand 21st century jobs. We won't get very far with a government that wants to stifle or ignore the creativity and entrepreneurship that's going to produce the next big idea."

Details of Kerry's technology platform have been long awaited by the Silicon Valley community, which has been avidly courted by both political parties in recent election cycles. High-tech endorsements translate into considerable campaign cash, as well as a more intangible aura of key business support.

President Bush gave his own speech in Washington on Wednesday, focusing on his high-technology initiatives. He concentrated specifically on the benefits of high-speed Internet connections for education, health care, business and homeland security.

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He cited his previously announced support for extending the ban on Internet access taxes, a key part of his drive to stimulate universal broadband access by 2007. He also urged Congress to pass legislation that would free up some government-controlled wireless spectrum for use by broadband services.

"As broadband expands, it's going to enable us better to protect our homeland, which is a vital concern of any of us in our government," Bush said, according to a transcript provided by the White House.

Kerry's proposal involved several components, including:

• cutting long-term capital gains taxes resulting from investment in small businesses and "reforming or eliminating" regulations that he said block America's high-tech competitiveness. He specifically cited venture capital investment in technology start-ups.

• offering a 20 percent tax credit to companies that invest in next-generation high-speed Net infrastructure. First responders, such as fire fighters and emergency crews, should have universal access to broadband services by the end of 2006, he said;

• increases in government-funded university research, including the extension of the research and development tax credit;

• more investment in elementary and secondary math and science education, and incentives for colleges to increase the number of science and engineering graduates.

Kerry said he would pay for these proposals by auctioning off TV spectrum, after a transition to digital television, for other licensed use. That and other spectrum auctions would raise $30 billion in revenue, he said.

Other positions
Kerry also staked out detailed positions on a number of issues close to the technology industry but less known in mainstream America. He said he would shift security policies that currently limit some computer hardware exports to focus more on classified software products used to design weapons. He also said he would end diversion of patent fees, something that technology advocates have sought for years in order to cut down on bogus intellectual-property claims.

President Bush has made his own appeals to the technology industry in recent months, calling for universal access to broadband Internet connections by 2007 and touting his tax cut policies. One group of technology executives, including Cisco Systems Chief John Chambers and eBay CEO Meg Whitman, has already endorsed the incumbent.

Kerry has already tread on some toes in Silicon Valley, telling union leaders that he supported making businesses expense stock options and referring to company executives that send jobs overseas as "Benedict Arnold CEOs."

An unrelated rally in Palo Alto, Calif., on Thursday featured Silicon Valley employees protesting against proposals to treat stock options as corporate expenses for accounting purposes.

Kerry's event echoed a similar trip that then-candidate Bill Clinton made in September 1992, when he held a 5,000-person strong rally on the San Jose State campus shortly before an event announcing the endorsement of key Silicon Valley executives.

That moment proved critical for the Democrats in 1992, as many of the business leaders had previously been staunch Republicans.

Kerry was appealing to a Silicon Valley that was in some senses similar to what Clinton faced in his first national election year. In 1992, the region was still suffering through the tail end of a deep recession, and Santa Clara county itself had lost 20,000 manufacturing jobs in 18 months.


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The boom-and-bust cycle of the dot-com era led to much more severe losses, however. The Silicon Valley region has lost closer to 200,000 jobs since the peak of the Internet bubble, or close to a fifth of its total employment base, local economists say. Unemployment now stands at about 5.9 percent, a figure that hides the migration of many workers out of the region altogether.

On Thursday, Kerry weighed in on the hot-button issue of offshoring, reiterating his position on ending tax breaks for companies that send jobs overseas. "We can and we must, and when I'm president, I will end the tax breaks that force American workers to subsidize the loss of their own jobs."

The valley also has become more politically active over the past 12 years, driven by bread-and-butter issues such as tort reform and stock option expensing, as well as longer-term issues such as education.

In the 2000 election cycle, computer-related companies, individuals and political-action committees gave more than $39 million to federal campaigns, skewing slightly to the Democratic side, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Through April of 2004, computer-related groups had given nearly $12 million, with 52 percent going to Republicans.

Iacocca, who endorsed George Bush in 2000, announced his switch on Thursday. "The world is changing. Our country is changing," he said. "We need a leader who understands the change that is taking place."

Noticeably absent from the rally were top Silicon Valley executives. Santa Clara County Democratic Party Chairman Steve Preminger said business leaders had been in attendance at Kerry fundraisers held Wednesday in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The audience, made up largely of supporters, reacted favorably to the speech.

Otto Lee, a Sunnyvale, Calif., patent attorney and City Council member, said Kerry's proposals for investment tax credits and research would be good for Silicon Valley. "It's very clear that he is willing to commit the dollars to research of new ideas," Lee said. "That will help create new jobs, and jobs are what we need."

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well now
we are into a debate over what he 'meant' rather than what he 'said'. the original poster claimed he did not 'say' it, but he did; what he meant by it is something altogether different, and i am incl... (Read the rest)
Posted by: eLurker Posted on: 06/25/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
ANYTHING is better than Bush at this point!  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
You sound like a real idiot.  numbers987654321 | 06/24/04
Shouldn't you be duct taping your windows..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
You so funny....  nucrash | 06/24/04
Actually that not quite true you know  voska | 06/24/04
our likeability...  ryusen | 06/24/04
friends  eLurker | 06/24/04
call it what you want...  ryusen | 06/24/04
re:  eLurker | 06/24/04
trust...  ryusen | 06/24/04
well  eLurker | 06/24/04
Politics and Religion  nucrash | 06/25/04
he's still a politician...  ryusen | 06/25/04
oh, we made the French upset  Dave P. | 06/25/04
the fights that Bush backs down to:  stephen732@... | 06/24/04
would you  eLurker | 06/24/04
Idiot  Dave P. | 06/25/04
I would also like to add.  computer_man | 06/24/04
you forgot  eLurker | 06/24/04
flip flops  tic swayback | 06/24/04
actually  eLurker | 06/24/04
Fair game for who?  tic swayback | 06/24/04
anyone -- thats politics  eLurker | 06/24/04
Wait for it  tic swayback | 06/24/04
I know..please already with the flip flops  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
how about some tongs then?  eLurker | 06/24/04
I agree to a degree but..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
yer basic pogo stick works for me!  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
jeff  eLurker | 06/24/04
False pretences  tic swayback | 06/24/04
tic - no  eLurker | 06/24/04
eLurker, we'll see  tic swayback | 06/24/04
we might see  eLurker | 06/24/04
I'm hoping  tic swayback | 06/24/04
re: hoping  eLurker | 06/24/04
another article for you  eLurker | 06/24/04
More to it than that  tic swayback | 06/25/04
of course  eLurker | 06/25/04
on protectign the environment...  ryusen | 06/25/04
sure  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
...those  eLurker | 06/24/04
You talking about that Sex machine.  computer_man | 06/24/04
Why the Left is misunderstood  ibabadur1 | 06/24/04
I think the left and right are stupid  voska | 06/24/04
i'm with you...  ryusen | 06/24/04
re:  eLurker | 06/24/04
the only judgment i'm passing  ryusen | 06/24/04
got it  eLurker | 06/24/04
no problem...  ryusen | 06/24/04
"Tolerance". I always get a kick out of that one.  Linux_Developer | 06/24/04
every generation there seems to be new labels for the same thing...  ryusen | 06/24/04
The labels get more and more deceptive, though.  Linux_Developer | 06/25/04
I agree.  Linux_Developer | 06/24/04
Difference between a citizens views and a Pols  ibabadur1 | 06/24/04
Two parties rule though  ibabadur1 | 06/24/04
I am not from "the left"  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
 eLurker | 06/24/04
your heart is palpitating..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
re:  eLurker | 06/24/04
Video taped confession not good enough?  Robert Crocker | 06/24/04
video taped confession of what?  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
and you think  eLurker | 06/24/04
tell me this..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
jeffy  eLurker | 06/24/04
Yes but..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/25/04
Michael Moore  Dave P. | 06/25/04
jeffy  eLurker | 06/25/04
That's right, crazy rhetoric  ibabadur1 | 06/24/04
Gee, another simple minded victim  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
(sigh)  TooLongInTheBiz | 06/24/04
the problem with moderates...  ryusen | 06/24/04
Answer to the Moderate Question  nucrash | 06/24/04
There are actual plausible reason to get rid of Bush  voska | 06/24/04
I agree, but  Harry Butts | 06/24/04
False accusations and ungrounded claims  Linux_Developer | 06/24/04
just like Al Gore invented the internet?  jurasek@... | 06/24/04
Al Gore never said that  bgoss@... | 06/24/04
i love that word --  eLurker | 06/24/04
doesn't it mean?  ryusen | 06/25/04
well now  eLurker | 06/25/04
I think your aluminum foil hat fell off.  Steve Summers | 06/24/04
10 out of 10 terrorists agree...  Dave P. | 06/25/04
man  eLurker | 06/24/04
Why?  rapson | 06/24/04
re: why?  eLurker | 06/24/04
OK  rapson | 06/24/04
frat house  Rembrandt Pussyhorse | 06/24/04
re:  eLurker | 06/24/04
answer  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
i expect  eLurker | 06/24/04
sad but true  Rembrandt Pussyhorse | 06/24/04
Well its your right to vote any way you want.  computer_man | 06/24/04
ussrip  Rembrandt Pussyhorse | 06/24/04
ironic  doctormoriarty | 06/24/04
tax taxes  Rembrandt Pussyhorse | 06/24/04
Hmmm  computer_man | 06/24/04
Time for real patriots to take back US  Rembrandt Pussyhorse | 06/24/04
what is...  eLurker | 06/24/04
I'm real patriot if you have doubts.  computer_man | 06/25/04
tax cut to whom?  doctormoriarty | 06/25/04
I want to know what his...  BitTwiddler | 06/24/04
Liberal say one thing mean the other  servent | 06/24/04
Bush says one thing, does another..  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
now jeff  eLurker | 06/24/04
I think looking at all presidents i know...  computer_man | 06/24/04
Conservitives say one thing and mean another...  Alpha_Female | 06/24/04
blah  eLurker | 06/24/04
Because in France...  jurasek@... | 06/24/04
lame comeback...  ryusen | 06/24/04
i am  eLurker | 06/24/04
one more thought along these lines  eLurker | 06/24/04
re: both posts  ryusen | 06/25/04
Get your facts straight  jurasek@... | 06/24/04
Your "facts"  ryusen | 06/24/04
YES!!!  Jeff Spicoli | 06/24/04
just a clarification  eLurker | 06/24/04
Two points  Robert Crocker | 06/25/04
taken things too far...  ryusen | 06/25/04
Unlike Liberals...  Dave P. | 06/25/04
Bush/Kerry - what's the difference ?  worknman | 06/25/04
Enron and Tyco, for instance  doctormoriarty | 06/25/04

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