JD Vance tries to mend the MAGA-Tech divide

On Tuesday, Vice Vice President JD Vance publicly admitted that he was “tension” close between two fighting factions within the Republican Party – Yamin Maga Popular and Technical Billionaires whose support to Donald Trump – called for a truce.
In comments at the Andrink Horwitz conference of the American dynamic in Washington, DC, Vans, a former project, and Peter Thil, pursued Bottg to Habibi Maga on the Internet, and sought to link two sides of the coalition that entered Trump to the White House, but found each other in philosophical difficulties. Throughout the period of transition and early management, the populist right began to criticize the new players and business schedules now affecting President-especially Elon Musk, who has sparked H1B1 visas with sharp reprimand from Steve Bannon, and Andressen, which helped the potential appointment.
“I would like to talk to these tensions as a proud member in both tribes,” Vans said in the comments. The New York Times reported. “While this is a source of goodwill anxiety, I think it depends on a wrong hypothesis. This idea that people who progress technology and popularists will somewhat reach wrong registrar heads.”
Vans’s comments sought to walk on a tight rope between the right of Maga and the primary opinion of the technology industry about globalization: Maga has long looked at a threat to the American working class, while the technology industry has strongly relied on the global economic expansion to expand its business. Instead, Vans suggested that it was the US government that has actually failed: “Not only the government of the last administration, but in some respects, during the past forty years.”
“Therefore, I will ask my friends, whether on the technical side, or on the popular side, not to see the failure of the logic of globalization as the failure of innovation.” “Each of our workers, our people, and our creators who gathered here today have the same enemy. The solution, I think, is the American innovation. Because in the long run, the technology that increases the value of work.”