High-profile tech billionaires, including Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk will sit front and center at President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration.
If there’s a competing interest between what’s good for Trump’s billionaire buddies and what’s good for you, who do you think will win that fight?
That Donald Trump was re-elected in November was not a failure of democracy. It was rather a sign of democracy hard at work.
"Wow, you really waited until your last day at work to start stuffing the suggestion box," was Meyers' sarcastic praise for Biden's farewell.
During the inauguration, the advanced technology and cryptocurrency sectors will be celebrating both Donald Trump's victory and their own, as noted by the "New York Times" on Thursday. American media highlight that the barons of Silicon Valley have gained influence over the fate of their industry and broadly understood U.
During the inauguration, the advanced technology and cryptocurrency sectors will be celebrating both Donald Trump's victory and their own, according to the "New York Times" on Thursday. American media highlight that the barons of Silicon Valley have gained influence over the fate of their industry and broadly understood US policy.
Negotiations over an 836,000-square-mile island may fall to a close friend of Elon Musk with experience in deal-making. Just not that kind of deal-making.
The elite of Silicon Valley are set to revel in their new clout during a long weekend of inaugural parties as President-elect Donald J. Trump is set to resume power.
Steve Bannon, former adviser to Donald Trump and architect of the MAGA movement, has turned his ire against yet another supplicant snake from Silicon Valley: Mark Zuckerberg.
Roads are choked. Real estate prices are stratospheric. As Trump supplicants, Silicon Valley moguls and Hollywood heavyweights swarm to Mar-a-Lago, longtime residents are seeing their quiet paradise upended.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has yet to meet President-elect Trump, highlighting trade tensions and AI policy divides in the tech industry.
Donald Trump’s second term won’t bring smaller government as promised. Instead, it will replace regulations with a system of executive grace and favor. The old bailout standard of “too big to fail” will be replaced by a new one: only the loyal survive.