October 21, 2008, 3:14 PM — Monday was the last day to register to vote in next month's election in Silicon Valley's Santa Clara County, where Barack Obama has a clear edge and, now, a really big backer: Google Inc.CEO Eric Schmidt .
CEOs usually avoid such public declarations to avoid getting clubbed in Washington if their candidate looses, but tech workers will likely vote in droves for Democrats. However, Google confirmed Monday that Schmidt was playing an active role for Obama, who visited Google late last year.
Schmidt's calculus must take note that in Santa Clara County, home to Google headquarters in Mountain View, 46% of the 759,645 registered voters are Democrats, 24% Republican, and 25% have not declared a party, a county spokeswoman said.
On the drive to the Google HQ, it's probably safe to say that some of those workers stop at a 7-Eleven, where customers can pick either an Obama or John McCain coffee cup. And in California, the store's coffee drinkers are picking Obama coffee cups 64% of the time.
But the preference us not just in California. In every state that has a large tech employment base, Obama is winning in coffee cup selections by large margins, with the exception of New Jersey. Obama has a slim cup-edge over John McCain.
Here's how tech employment, using figures from the AeA's (formerly American Electronics Association) annual Cyberstate report, and 7-Eleven coffee cup count works out.
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- 1. California: total tech employment, 941,000. 7-Eleven coffee cup sales ratios: 64% Obama, 36% McCain.
- 2. Texas: 459,500 tech workers; Coffee cups: 61% Obama, 39% McCain.
- 3. New York: 301,500 tech workers. Coffee cups: 53% Obama, 47% McCain.
- 4. Florida: 282,100 tech workers. Coffee cups: 57% Obama, 43% McCain.
- 5. Virginia: 270,800 tech workers; Coffee cups: 61% Obama, 39% McCain.
- 6. Massachusetts: 242,500 tech workers. Coffee cups: 62% Obama, 38% McCain.
- 7. Pennsylvania: 210,200 tech workers. Coffee cups: 61% Obama, 39% McCain.
- 8. Illinois: 209,300 tech workers. Coffee cups: 61% Obama; 39% McCain.
- 9. New Jersey: 197,200 tech workers. Coffee cups: 52% Obama, 48% McCain.
- 10. Michigan: 176,100 tech workers. Coffee cups, 62% Obama, 38% McCain.
In all the states that 7-Eleven has stores in, Obama coffee cups are picked 60% of the time. 7-Eleven says the data, which involved about 6 million total cup sales in previous elections, has been close to actual election results. In 2004, the ratio of cups sold was 51% for George Bush and 49% for John Kerry.
In fund raising, Obama has received 62% of the $28.7 million that the Center for Responsive Politics attributes to tech industry political action committees and individuals.
Schmidt probably also looked at some Web site traffic data regarding Obama. He has, like we all do, access to what might be the world's largest database.
If clicks mean votes, then Google Trend data shows Obama trouncing McCain in terms of site traffic.
Google's data was supported. last week by traffic measuring firm comScore Inc., which said BarackObama.com had 5.4 million unique visitors in August. John McCain had 3 million unique visitors, but also the fastest growth that month at 109%, versus 37% for Obama. ComScore partly attributed the growth to McCain's selection of Alaska's Governor, Sarah Palin, as his running mate.
Despite this cash, cup, and click-momentum in Obama's favor, Google issued a written statement about Schmidt's political activities, seeking to put distance between the company and its CEO: "Eric is actively campaigning for Barack Obama because he believes that it is time for a change in America. In addition, his personal views on technology and energy are similar to Senator Obama's. Google, of course, remains neutral in the campaign."













