In recent months, the Republican Party has sought to capitalize on the mounting political battles between local governments and car-for-hire services like Uber and Lyft. Several conservatives have pointed to the free-market, sharing-economy approach to trumpet the party’s lower-regulation, starve-the-government message, and as a way to woo younger, tech-savvy voters.
But the politics aren’t as simple as all that.
On its face, Uber is a free-market conservative’s dream: A start-up business making smart use of technology and terrific customer service to out-compete a lumbering taxi establishment giant grown bloated by union influence. But as many Democrats have pointed out, the very purpose of government is to regulate businesses like Uber in order to safeguard citizens.
Earlier this fall, the Republican National Committee began a petition in support of Uber. In the petition, which just over 11,000 people have signed, the RNC criticizes “taxi unions and liberal government bureaucrats” who are “setting up road blacks, issuing strangling regulations and implementing unnecessary red tape to block Uber from doing business in their cities.” Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida — a potential 2016 GOP presidential candidate — has also made similar remarks. And tax reform activist Grover Norquist has gone as far as to insist companies like Uber can help the GOP take over cities that have been controlled by Democrats due to the left’s “refusal to embrace the innovative technology and disruptive businesses that have greatly improved city life.”
Related: Why the GOP can’t get enough of Uber
The traditional thinking pits Democratic constituencies like organized labor against companies like Uber, with free-market conservatives on the side of these sexy start-ups. But a closer look reveals that the politics of tech disruption are far from clear cut — and certainly don’t fit neatly into “Republican” or Democratic” boxes.
“I don’t think there are any clear partisan lines yet,” said Andrew Moylan, executive director and senior fellow at the R Street Institute, a libertarian-leaning think tank based in Washington, D.C. “The reality has not yet caught up to the [Republican] rhetoric nationally.” The group recently released a report card grading cities on varying measurements of friendliness for transportation apps like Uber and Lyft. There were no obvious partisan lines. Interestingly, several liberal cities like Austin, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. established sensible regulatory climates and fared well, according to R Street. More conservative cities like Houston, San Antonio and Orlando fared poorly, and have embraced what Moylan describes as onerous regulations that hinder residents there from using the popular car-for-hire service.
Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business who studies the so-called sharing economy, agrees that the politics are not clear-cut. “Given the fact that this is the very early stage, I don’t think the issues have permeated sufficiently into the knowledge place of local lawmakers for them to have strong positions along party lines,” he said.
Uber spokesman, Lane Kasselman told msnbc on Thursday, “When it comes to a safe and hassle-free ride, there are no sides of the aisle. More than a dozen cities and states — both red and blue — have recognized the value of Uber and passed permanent ridesharing regulations, and we appreciate the bipartisan support.”
There are plenty of examples underscoring that point. Take, for example, ultra-conservative Gov. Jan Brewer of Arizona, who earlier this year vetoed a bill that would have benefited companies like Lyft and Uber. Then there’s Democratic Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, who recently vetoed a bill targeting such on-demand taxi companies with strict state-wide regulations — including mandatory commercial insurance and chauffeur licenses for drivers.
Uber’s recent hiring of Obama’s former top strategist — David Plouffe — throws a wrench into the conventional wisdom, too.
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Moylan did say, however, that the legal fights have unearthed a division in the broader liberal coalition. “There’s the union-centric, labor-oriented side of that movement, which has done a lot to impose new regulatory climates and try to protect entrenched industries. On the other side, you have a younger, more tech-savvy part of the liberal movement not tied to union politics and more open to these technologies. Republicans have been trying to highlight that.”








