"Left" and "right" carry little meaning when it comes to analyzing the divide between people. The "with/without money" bit is of a much higher order than the global "left/right" bit to me.
I don’t really care about the paper author’s fate, but it seems unsettling to me that she is discussed more than the paper itself.
We see that on average, tech founders are less likely to support vs. even Democrats generally (not just progressives):
* Banning the Keystone XL pipeline (60% vs 78%)
* The individual healthcare mandate (59% vs 70%)
* Labor unions being good (29% vs 73%)
This is to say, the average Silicon Valley type, particularly the C-suite exec or founder, tends not to be on the left wing of the Democratic party.
During the 2020 Democratic primary, even the Silicon Valley billionaires who are openly Democratic-leaning donated to candidates who were not to the left of the field (i.e. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders) (https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/13/2020-democratic-presidential...):
* Eric Schmidt -> Cory Booker and Joe Biden
* Reed Hastings -> Pete Buttigieg
* Marc Benioff -> Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, and Jay Inslee
I'm engaging with you in good faith, and because I was intrigued that in a previous comment you mentioned that you live in Spain (though who's to say you're not a US ex-pat). But calling US tech companies "leftist" is a stretch at best.
Most executives of tech and news companies would bend over backwards just to show how leftist they are in 2020.
(I’m only replying to the part of your comment that answers mine)