Gov. Gavin Newsom of California at a Democratic campaign event in San Francisco's Mission District, Nov. 5, 2022. The California governor’s press office is mimicking President Trump’s distinctive Truth Social style on X. Liberals love it. The White House says it’s “just getting weird at this point.” (Jim Wilson/The New York Times/File)

- California governor's X account account morphs into a Democratic imitation of Trump’s Truth Social musings, hyping Newsom as “AMERICA’S MOST FAVORITE GOVERNOR.”
- The account now has about 430,000 followers, which the governor’s team said was 250,000 more than it had Aug. 1.
- In June, Newsom and his press office began directly attacking conservative critics, often in caustic tones using Star Wars memes.
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Just a few months ago, the X account run by Gov. Gavin Newsom’s press office was pushing out anodyne content that was barely noticed in the social media landscape.
It touted Newsom’s effort to improve vocational education in California. It announced that a new steel mill was breaking ground. It assured Californians that the state was preparing for incoming winter storms.
It was official, routine and easily overlooked. In other words, as President Donald Trump might say, SAD!
No more. Last week, the account morphed into a Democratic imitation of Trump’s Truth Social musings, hyping Newsom as “AMERICA’S MOST FAVORITE GOVERNOR.”
Dismissive nicknames, grandstanding boasts and long, winding tangents ARE WRITTEN IN ALL CAPITAL LETTERS. They are peppered with an inordinate number of exclamation points!!!
Perhaps most strikingly, the posts have been written in a scathing tone and at times have been intentionally offensive.
Newsom: I’m Holding Up a Mirror to Trump
Plenty of social media accounts have tried to emulate Trump’s voice for laughs. Only one belongs to a sitting governor.
Newsom, a potential presidential candidate in 2028, believes his account is holding up a mirror to Trump, who regularly calls the governor “Newscum.” He and his supporters see his social media posts as highlighting the ridiculous nature of the president’s bombastic, bare-knuckles, grammar-flexible communications.
“It’s following his example,” Newsom explained at a recent news conference. “If you’ve got issues with what I’m putting out, you sure as hell should have concerns about what he’s putting out as president.”
Newsom has said that Democrats need to better understand the MAGA movement if they want to win back voters. He has made a point of including right-wing social media accounts and stations like Fox News and Newsmax in his media diet.
He was particularly disturbed by the way misinformation spread during the Los Angeles wildfires in January, a spokesperson said. Social media posts falsely claimed that the Hollywood sign was on fire and that the inferno was started by a satanic ritual. The governor’s staff began using their social media accounts to rebut false claims, but those barely made a dent.
When National Guard Went to LA, Newsom Became More Aggressive
When Trump sent National Guard troops into Los Angeles in June, Newsom’s office realized that traditional responses were not going to be enough, said Izzy Gardon, the governor’s director of communications.
That month, Newsom and his press office began directly attacking conservative critics, often in caustic tones. Many took notice when they began using Star Wars memes.
But Newsom’s office didn’t truly flip the script until last week, when it mimicked Trump’s Truth Social style for the first time as the battle over redistricting heated up.
“DONALD TRUMP, IF YOU DO NOT STAND DOWN, WE WILL BE FORCED TO LEAD AN EFFORT TO REDRAW THE MAPS IN CA TO OFFSET THE RIGGING OF MAPS IN RED STATES,” began the post on the morning of Aug. 11.
It ended like so many of Trump’s posts do: “THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER!”
It was intended as a one-time joke, according to his office, but the response was overwhelming compared with previous posts. The governor’s communications team — four core members and a couple of others who chime in — decided to keep going.
White House: Nothing About ‘Newscum’ Is Authentic
Abigail Jackson, a spokesperson for the White House, wrote in an email, “Nothing about Newscum is authentic — from his rehearsed answers to his flip-flopping policy positions — he goes whatever way the wind blows.”
“It makes sense that he would try to mimic the President’s wildly successful communication strategy,” she added. “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but Gavin’s behavior is just getting weird at this point.”
The press office has been reluctant to explain who is writing the posts, attributing them to a team of Newsom aides who offer ideas each day.
“The governor has tasked us with communicating more effectively, so we’re doing it,” Gardon said. If it’s a really good post, “you can credit the governor. If it flops, blame the clueless intern.”
Newsom’s approach bears similarities to The Onion, the satirical newspaper, and The Colbert Report, the former Comedy Central show in which comedian Stephen Colbert played a conservative talk show host. The absurdity of Colbert’s caricature inherently mocked those on the right.
It can be folly to directly counter Newsom’s posts with serious critiques. When conservatives do, Newsom and his supporters are happy to point out that they have allowed Trump to set this tone for the past decade.
Governor’s X Account Grows Followers After Mocking Trump
The governor’s team said it would continue the approach as long as people keep laughing. So far, there seems to be no sign of waning interest. The account now has about 430,000 followers, which the governor’s team said was 250,000 more than it had Aug. 1.
The following of the press office account has grown higher than the followings of the main accounts of other Democratic governors, including JB Pritzker of Illinois, Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Kathy Hochul of New York. (Newsom’s main account on X, @GavinNewsom, has 2.4 million followers. The president’s X account boasts 108 million.)
Newsom’s posts are perhaps grabbing so much attention because they stand out from the rest of the Democratic Party’s ineffective approach of playing it safe and proceeding as if it’s business as usual, said Sarah Roberts, the director of the Center for Critical Internet Inquiry at UCLA.
“It’s certainly over the top, but we’re in over-the-top times, aren’t we?” she said. “Many people who feel disenfranchised at this moment have taken some solace in seeing what one might describe as fighting fire with fire.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By Heather Knight and Laurel Rosenhall/Jim Wilson
c.2025 The New York Times Company
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