Categories: Business & Economy

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff Apologizes for Saying National Guard Needed in San Francisco

Marc Benioff, co-founder and CEO of Salesforce, appears to walk back his comments calling for the National Guard to patrol San Francisco.

“After listening carefully to my fellow San Francisco residents and our local officials, and after the largest and most secure Dreamforce in our history, I do not believe the National Guard is necessary to ensure security in San Francisco,” Benioff said in an article on

Benioff sparked controversy last week after giving an interview to the New York Times in which he stated his support for President Donald Trump’s threats to deploy National Guard troops to San Francisco and other cities led by Democratic politicians.

While Benioff’s comments were apparently prompted by his concerns about public safety costs at the major Dreamforce conference the company hosted in San Francisco last week, the liberal-leaning former billionaire also used the interview to embrace Trump, at one point saying, “I fully support the president” and adding that Trump is “doing a great job.” (At the end of the interview, he reportedly asked his shocked PR manager, “Too spicy?”)

And although Benioff’s pro-Trump stance seemingly aligns with a more rightward shift among tech executives, his call for the National Guard to come to San Francisco quickly led to backlash from his longtime allies and Democratic politicians. Renowned VC Ron Conway has resigned from the Salesforce Foundation board. Conway reportedly told Benioff in an email: “I barely recognize now the person I have admired for so long. »

A planned event featuring Benioff and San Francisco Mayor Dan Lurie was also canceled, with organizers citing rain.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, who represents San Francisco, told Politico: “I’m grateful that Marc backed away from his call to deploy the National Guard to San Francisco. Marc has done so many good things for our city – and supported so many civic needs – and I’m happy to see this change.”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025

Trump has already deployed the National Guard to other cities, including Washington, D.C. and Chicago, while a judge has so far blocked his attempts to do the same in Portland. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a Democrat, has repeatedly described this as an “invasion” of his state.

Michael Johnson

Recent Posts

Gemini removes @Google Maps and @YouTube apps

Gemini is cleaning up its apps, previously called extensions, for more direct integrations that don't require invoking @YouTube or @Google…

27 minutes ago

Kylie Jenner Shows Off Pink Latex Look in Instagram Party Videos

Kylie JennerInstagram's latest party photos have sent the internet into a frenzy. The reality star shared stories on Instagram, showing…

30 minutes ago

TVK chief Vijay breaks silence after Karur stampede, says ‘did nothing wrong, political journey will continue’

Actor-turned-politician and Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) founder Vijay on Tuesday (September 30) said that he has done nothing wrong and…

32 minutes ago

Here’s how Trump can hit China where it really hurts, as Beijing’s rare earth bet could backfire.

The Trump administration insists it has the upper hand as trade frictions with Beijing have reignited over its sweeping controls…

36 minutes ago

Georgia vs. Ole Miss live updates, score, game analysis and highlights

No. 9 Georgia looks for revenge Saturday afternoon when it hosts No. 5 Ole Miss in a big matchup between…

38 minutes ago