REVEALED: Google staffers have had at least 427 meetings at the White House over course of Obama presidency - averaging more than one a week
Mail Online: Newly compiled data reveals Google and its affiliates have attended meetings at the White House more than once a week, on average, since President Barack Obama took office.
The
meetings took place at least 427 times. The data used spans from
Obama's first month in office in 2009 until October 2015, and includes
government meetings with representatives of Google-affiliated companies
Tomorrow Ventures and Civis Analytics.
The Google employee with the most visits
is the company's head of public policy, Johanna Shelton, who paid the
White House 128 visits.
The government's apparently cozy relationship with Google was brought up about a year ago by the Wall Street Journal.
In
response to a story in the Journal titled 'Google Makes Most of Close
Ties to White House,' the company responded: 'Of course we’ve had many
meetings at the White House over the years.'
Google wrote that
topics discussed in the meetings ranged from patent reform, STEM
education, and self-driving cars to Internet censorship, smart contact
lenses, and cyber security.
Friday's
report in the Intercept came a week after Obama announced his support
for a Federal Communications Commission plan that would make it easier
for pay-TV customers to buy their own set-top boxes - a plan which an
AT&T executive blasted as a 'Google proposal.'
'This will allow for companies to create new, innovative, higher-quality, lower-cost products,' the White House wrote in a blog post announcing the initiative.
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