The Silicon Valley congressional race is getting ugly
The primary isn’t until early June, but the CA-17 race between five-term incumbent Ro Khanna and tech founder Ethan Agarwal is already getting nasty. Agarwal entered the race in March, backed by a roster of prominent tech billionaires largely in response to Khanna’s public support for a proposed California ballot measure that would impose a one-time 5% tax on residents worth more than $1 billion.
Agarwal, for his part, has been going after Khanna by primarily citing his stock trades while in office.
Now newsrooms covering the race have been receiving anonymous packages of digital court documents detailing Agarwal’s legal past. The file includes a $683,000 personal judgment against him after he stopped making payments on a $2 million copyright settlement with Universal Music Group, which had accused his company Aaptiv — a workout app that paired audio coaching with licensed music — of using its recordings without permission; a nearly $2 million landlord lawsuit tied to Aaptiv’s One World Trade Center office, filed in 2023 over a lease Aaptiv walked away from during COVID; and a 2019 federal lawsuit alleging adult content was downloaded from Agarwal’s IP address. The last was brought by Malibu Media (a company that filed thousands of nearly identical suits against IP addresses across the country and was widely criticized as a legal shakedown operation).
The landlord case was later dropped; the Malibu Media case settled without any court finding of liability. The UMG judgment is the most substantive item in the file. Agarwal personally guaranteed the $2 million settlement before stopping payments three months from the finish line; the two sides later brokered another settlement.
Agarwal got ahead of at least one story himself. After the New York Post on Friday ran the headline “Silicon Valley tech candidate was sued for downloading lots of porn,” Agarwal shared it on social media, writing: “I think transparency and authenticity is important among political candidates. We’re people. We’re not perfect. Yes, this is embarrassing. But now you know my worst thing.”
Investor Chamath Palihapitiya, one of his prominent backers, weighed in soon after, tweeting to Agarwal: “The opposition research has started on you because you may win and Ro is starting to get worried.”
Topics
Government & Policy
Connie Loizos
Editor in Chief & General Manager
Loizos has been reporting on Silicon Valley since the late ’90s, when she joined the original Red Herring magazine. Previously the Silicon Valley Editor of TechCrunch, she was named Editor in Chief and General Manager of TechCrunch in September 2023. She’s also the founder of StrictlyVC, a daily e-newsletter and lecture series acquired by Yahoo in August 2023 and now operated as a sub brand of TechCrunch.
You can contact or verify outreach from Connie by emailing connie@strictlyvc.com or connie@techcrunch.com, or via encrypted message at ConnieLoizos.53 on Signal.
View Bio
April 30
San Francisco, CA
StrictlyVC kicks off the year in SF. Get in the room for unfiltered fireside chats with industry leaders, insider VC insights, and high-value connections that actually move the needle. Tickets are limited.
REGISTER NOW
Most Popular
-
Why OpenAI really shut down Sora
- Connie Loizos
-
The Pixel 10a doesn’t have a camera bump, and it’s great
- Ivan Mehta
-
Anthropic’s Claude popularity with paying consumers is skyrocketing
- Julie Bort
-
Waymo’s skyrocketing ridership in one chart
- Kirsten Korosec
-
The AI skills gap is here, says AI company, and power users are pulling ahead
- Rebecca Bellan
-
Google unveils TurboQuant, a new AI memory compression algorithm — and yes, the internet is calling it ‘Pied Piper’
- Sarah Perez
-
Kentucky woman rejects $26M offer to turn her farm into a data center
- Graham Starr