* https://osc.gov/Services/Pages/HatchAct-Federal.aspx
* https://www.esd.whs.mil/Portals/54/Documents/DD/issuances/do...
I generally follow that same guidance even when not in federal employment just out of decorum, mutual respect, and professionalism. As such I would view my corporate business leaders becoming directly involved in elections and commingling that activity with their office leadership as completely and irreversibly toxic.
Perhaps making tribal affiliation a requirement was a bad idea after all.
Although it is interesting to see who all the rich and famous support.
Sadly though intellectual honesty is much more rare than you think.
Corporations, IMO, should not be involved in politics at all - only real people. Rich people would still have more influence over political decisions, but not to the extent that rich corporations do now.
From time to time I have thought ISOC was shilling for FAANG lobby ideas in discussions about European legislation.
So I guess my take is: inevitable, usually unfortunate.
The lack of a clearly left wing tech bro billionaire stance is obvious, but you could imagine one being more like Warren Buffet or MacKenzie-Gates, or even Bill Gates: more nuanced than Theil, Musk, Bezos. Not anti union, not oppositional to social agenda like women's reproductive rights, housing, regulation of their industry.
It’s not exactly the question you’re asking, but what I’m trying to say is, this is the natural outcome of our economic system. Tech organizations involvement in politics is a side effect.