Google strategist admits to ‘coordinated effort’ to help Harris campaign

Google Growth Strategist Dakota Leazer has admitted that tech giants and major corporations are running a coordinated effort to help Kamala Harris win the presidential election, according to video footage released Tuesday.

Leazer unwittingly made the comments to an undercover OMG Media journalist, who recorded his remarks on a hidden camera.

‘It’s definitely coordinated’

The Google executive explained that the tech giant is “reorienting the search engine” to favor Harris by pulling a bait-and-switch on users.

“Google was essentially promoting through its ads, like, rhetoric that was very pro-Kamala, and it seemed to link out to legitimate news publication sites,” he said. “It would seem like it was an ad for PBS, but it was really an ad for the Kamala campaign or whatever.”

Leazer added there is “a coordinated effort by Big Tech and big companies to try and get her to win — it’s definitely coordinated.”

“When you zoom out and look at who’s really pulling the strings of this country, it’s like a handful of billionaires, a lot of them are in tech, and it’s like tech controls the media, essentially.”

Facebook is another tech company that has joined the pro-Harris effort, Leazer mused, along with AI technology in general.

“Facebook, I feel like is promoting content that is favorable towards her,” he explained. “A lot of the AI stuff that’s sort of, like, liberating right now, is doing so in a way that’s generally favorable to her.”

He again stressed that billionaires “want Kamala to be our next CEO but I don’t think there’s a chance that she wins.”

When the undercover operative asked him if he regrets that voters are being deceived, the Google employee said no.

“I feel like if it’s not Google, it’s going to be someone else. I mean, it’s all like a psyop [psychological operation].”

Fear sells

To Leazer, the push to put Harris in the White House is more economic than political. Corporations are after profits, he explained, and fear is profitable — which makes the Left a cash cow.

“I think whatever demographic is most fearful is going to be most profitable,” Leazer said. “And I think right now the left is more fearful than the right is.”

He said the Left feels “some impending sense of doom” and fears an “existential American crisis that democracy is going to end.”