NEWS
Just in time for November elections in the US, Google confirmed on Monday it filed the federal paperwork necessary to set up a political action committee, or PAC, an organisation designed expressly to raise money for political candidates and causes.
The top priority for Google NetPAC, as the company has named it, will be swaying "critical decisions affecting internet freedom, innovation, and competition", said Alan Davidson, Google's Washington policy counsel.
Davidson added in an email interview: "It's simply a part of our company's steadily increasing involvement in national and global policy issues."
The company began stepping up those efforts last year when it hired Davidson, formerly of the Center for Democracy and Technology advocacy group, to launch a Washington-based policy shop. Since then, it has added Jamie Brown, a former White House aide under President Bush, and continues to employ outside lobbying companies.
The San Francisco Chronicle first reported the creation of Google's PAC on Saturday.
Google's widening foray into the policy sphere is hardly novel among tech companies of its size and stature. Contributions by technology companies have grown since the late 1990s, and many major corporations - including Intel, Microsoft and Oracle - already count PAC donations as part of their political strategy. Not all, however, subscribe to the idea. Apple and IBM are among the large companies that have refrained from forming PACs so far.
In recent months, Google has found itself the subject of scrutiny by US politicians and bureaucrats. It joined Cisco Systems, Microsoft and Yahoo! at a well-publicised February hearing in which a House of Representatives panel lashed out at the companies' alleged compliance with the Chinese government's censorship regime.
The company has also been at the forefront of the net neutrality debate, an issue that has divided politicos mostly along party lines and now threatens to derail a larger communications bill pending in the Senate. Google maintains that without stringent net neutrality regulations, the internet will cease to be a consumer-friendly, user-driven environment.
Google's Davidson added: "Google NetPAC will support officeholders and candidates who share Google's goal of preserving and promoting the internet as a free and open platform for information, communication, and innovation."
Anne Broache writes for CNET News.com






Comments
There is 1 comment. Join the discussion
1. Richard
Google for President!
At least Google does not (yet) become involved in costly, questionable foreign conflicts.