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Google Cancels Staff Meeting to Address Diversity Imbroglio

Former Google engineer’s memo asserted that biological causes are behind gender diversity.

Google Cancels Staff Meeting to Address Diversity Imbroglio
Attendees gather inside a ‘sandbox’ product experience area at the Google I/O Annual Developers Conference in Mountain View, California, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Short/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Alphabet Inc.’s Google canceled an all-hands meeting to address gender issues and the firing of an engineer who stirred controversy with a memo about hiring practices, citing concerns over staff safety.

In a memo to employees on Thursday afternoon, Google Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai said he canceled the meeting after questions to be asked at the meeting were posted online, raising concerns that employees identified in the leak would be harassed.

"In recognition of Googlers’ concerns, we need to step back and create a better set of conditions for us to have the discussion," Pichai wrote. "So in the coming days we will find several forums to gather and engage with Googlers, where people can feel comfortable to speak freely." A Google spokeswoman declined to comment further.

James Damore, a software engineer for the company, wrote an internal memo saying that women are biologically less suited than men to be engineers. It also decried Google’s efforts to diversify its workforce. Google fired him Monday, saying that the memo violated the company code of conduct and advanced "harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace.”

Damore has said that Google executives had "shamed" him for the views expressed in the memo.

The memo and firing has placed the company into the center of a maelstrom of political controversy. Several commentators, some of representing the far right, have blasted the company’s decision, accusing it of suppressing free speech.

On Thursday, Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican Congressman from California, joined the online fray in support for Damore. "If Silicon Valley continues with its illegal hiring practice Congress must investigate #googlememo," he wrote on Twitter. Ken Grubbs, a spokesman for Representative Rohrabacher, did not return a request for comment. Google has denied Damore’s charge that its hiring practices are illegal.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mark Bergen in San Francisco at mbergen10@bloomberg.net, Ellen Huet in San Francisco at ehuet4@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jillian Ward at jward56@bloomberg.net, Tom Giles