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Trump supporters gather ahead of tony fundraiser in Newport Beach

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Trump supporters gather ahead of tony fundraiser in Newport Beach

Several hundred supporters of former President Trump gathered in Newport Beach early Saturday morning, cheering for the presumptive GOP presidential nominee and roared after catching a glimpse of his motorcade en route to an exclusive fundraiser on gated Harbor Island shortly before 1 p.m.

Many in the crowd waved and chanted, “Donald! Donald!” as the row of blacked-out SUVs crossed the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Jamboree Road. The song “God Bless America” blasted in the background.

Earlier, as people waved flags that read “Trump 2024” and a banner that read “Never Surrender!” and “We stand united with Trump!,” Andrea Flores, 49, of Rancho Santa Margarita, stood on a corner wearing a red Trump baseball cap and chatting with a fellow supporter, pausing her conversation periodically to cheer as people driving by honked their horns. A song with the lyrics “Trump, President Trump he’s the only one who can get the job done” played on a speaker.

A Donald Trump mask-wearing supporter gave a better view of the former president than his motorcade that sped past in Newport Beach on Saturday.

(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)

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“I wish people would let go of the hate they have for him and do what’s best for the country,” Flores said. “There’s only two candidates right now — one that can’t walk and talk and one that they hate — you have to pick your poison.”

Flores, a Republican, said the economy and the border are among her top issues this election. As for Trump’s recent conviction, several supporters in the crowd, including Flores, said the charges were “politically motivated.”

The Saturday event was the last stop on a three-day fundraising trip in California — his first forays with donors after a New York jury convicted him of 34 counts of falsifying business records about $130,000 in payments to adult film actor Stormy Daniels, who alleges they had sex in Lake Tahoe during a golf tournament, in an effort to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Trump has lagged behind President Biden in fundraising — both nationally and in California. And Democrats are also spending time in the state raising money — Vice President Kamala Harris held at least three fundraisers this week. Biden is headlining a major fundraiser next weekend with former President Obama and actors George Clooney and Julia Roberts.

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On Friday and Saturday, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Gov. Gavin Newsom were among the speakers at a fundraiser for Democratic congressional candidates at the Lodge at Torrey Pines in La Jolla, about 70 miles south of Trump’s event in Orange County.

Trump has received an infusion of cash since the verdicts were announced on May 30. Notably, he reported raising $53 million in the first 24 hours after the trial ended and $18 million at fundraisers in San Francisco and Beverly Hills during this swing.

Donald Trump is in a motorcade that leaves a home while people line the street.

Donald Trump leaves a home that held a fundraiser for his campaign in Beverly Hills on Friday while fans and demonstrators stand outside.

(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

On Saturday, donors spent up to $100,000 to attend the Newport Beach roundtable and luncheon at a Harbor Island manse overlooking Newport Bay — the least expensive top tickets of the trip. A line of sharply dressed people, some sporting red, white and blue, waited for vans to shuttle them from the Hyatt Regency to the fundraiser Saturday morning.

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Donald Holly Sr., 82, woke up Saturday morning with butterflies in his stomach. It would be his first time seeing Trump, and the Fullerton resident was ecstatic. He brought a bottle of seltzer water to calm his stomach as he approached the hotel. His son Richard Holly, 56, followed closely behind, brushing at his dad’s suit with a lint roller to clean off any wisp of cat hair.

“I just totally admire and look up to Donald J. Trump, very successful businessman,” Donald Holly Sr. said. “He just knows how to run a business and certainly knows how to run a country. All you have to do is look at what we had and as far as inflation goes, no world wars — everything was going on fine from ’16 to ’20.”

Trump also would not have bungled the exit from Afghanistan, he said, referring to the chaotic removal of American troops in 2021 on President Biden’s watch.

The Hollys own Brea Electric, which Yorba Linda resident Richard Holly is now handing off to his children, the fourth generation of Hollys to run the small Orange County business. Part of his reason for supporting Trump, Richard Holly said, was the former president’s support for small businesses and family values.

“We’re here because we like the traditional conservative family values that we grew up with,” Richard Holly said. “California is different than it was when I was a kid.”

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Trump supporters with flags and signs in Newport Beach on the roadside.

Trump supporters in Newport Beach on Saturday. The former president was attending a fundraiser.

(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)

The Newport Beach fundraiser is taking place on Harbor Island, one of the most exclusive neighborhoods in this coastal enclave, filled with waterfront mansions and residents who have high expectations of privacy.

The event is scheduled to take place at the home of health insurance company co-founder John Word and his wife, Kimberly, whose home appeared to be decorated with red, white and blue bunting across the seawall and along doors and windows on the property. Billionaire tech entrepreneur Palmer Luckey, who lives on nearby Lido Isle, was a co-host of the event.

On Friday evening, Trump headlined a fundraiser at the Beverly Hills Italianate mansion of Lee Samson, a longtime philanthropist who is on the board of directors of the Republican Jewish Coalition. He has hosted many fundraisers for GOP politicians over the years, including one for Trump in 2019 that raised $5 million and another in 2020 with the then-president’s daughter Ivanka supporting his reelection that raised $2 million.

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Donald Trump waves to supporters as he leaves a home that held a fundraiser for his campaign in Beverly Hills on Friday.

Donald Trump waves to supporters as he leaves a home that held a fundraiser for his campaign in Beverly Hills on Friday.

(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Nearby, a Burbank artist arranged a birthday greeting for the former president, who turns 78 on Friday. A few dozen supporters waved flags outside the event, including one featuring a QAnon conspiracy theory that referenced a canard that John F. Kennedy Jr. is still alive, while some neighbors watched the spectacle from a distance.

Tickets to Friday’s event cost up to $250,000 per person, and the event raised $6 million for his 2024 campaign, Trump told the crowd, according to attendee Gregg Donovan, 64, of Santa Monica.

Donovan, dressed in his red-tailcoat and black top-hat uniform from his former role as the goodwill ambassador of Beverly Hills, said he was moved to buy a $5,000 ticket because seeing Trump’s reelection bid in person “was history in the making.”

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The longtime Trump supporter said he was alarmed by Trump’s conviction, because “if it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone.”

He said he expects Trump to win in November, in part because among his friends, Trump has more support than he did in 2020 — especially among immigrants who are angry about the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border.

After Trump was introduced by North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum — reportedly among the elected officials being vetted as a potential running mate — and Samson, the former president spoke for about 45 minutes and promised on Day 1 in the Oval Office to secure the border and to “drill, baby, drill,” Donovan said.

Deputies kept Trump supporters out of traffic on the street.

Orange County Sheriff’s deputies kept Trump supporters out of traffic lanes in Newport Beach on Saturday. The crowd came out to cheer Trump, who was on a fundraising visit.

(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)

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Samson is the founder of Windsor Healthcare Management, one of the largest skilled nursing and rehabilitation providers in California and Arizona. One of the group’s facilities was accused in 2020 of pressuring patients to relocate so it could accept more lucrative patients during the pandemic, according to the New York Times.

A spokesperson for the Windsor Park Care Center in Fremont, where the incident allegedly occurred, declined comment to the newspaper, but Samson told it, “Whatever my political affiliation, Windsor’s commitment to protecting its residents will never be compromised.”

The President Biden-Vice President Kamala Harris reelection campaign seized upon the allegations.

“If you want to know who Donald Trump fights for, just look at who he spends his time with: grifters, criminals — and … in this case, a billionaire who evicted seniors from his nursing homes during a deadly pandemic to line his own pockets,” said Sarafina Chitika, a spokesperson for the campaign. “Trump is making it clear to America’s seniors that if he wins this November, he’ll happily sell them out to his billionaire donors — gutting Social Security and Medicare while passing tax giveaways for his wealthy, extreme allies.”

The evening fundraiser ended relatively early because many guests were Jewish and needed to head home for Shabbat, Trump said, according to Donovan. Attendees in cocktail dresses and suits spilled out onto the quiet Beverly Hills street shortly before sunset.

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As Trump’s motorcade left shortly before 8 p.m., Robin Dominguez, 67, thrust a sign into the air that read, “TRUMP GUILTY” and, on the other side, “LOCK HIM UP.” She wore a red shirt that read in white type: “Make Racists Afraid Again.”

One woman in a red MAGA hat screamed, “shame on you,” at Dominguez, then told her if she didn’t like the U.S., she should move to Venezuela. The window of a red SUV rolled down as it passed by, and a preteen passenger yelled: “Hey lady! Put that sign down. The case was illegitimate.”

A Donald Trump supporter stands outside a home in Beverly Hills on Friday.

A Donald Trump supporter stands outside a home in Beverly Hills on Friday.

(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Dominguez said many people told her Friday that Trump’s trial was a sham. But, she said, “How can it be a conspiracy when 12 people all found him guilty?”

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On Thursday in San Francisco, Trump told donors at venture capitalist David Sacks’ Pacific Heights’ estate that he raised $12 million. Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, another elected official reportedly on Trump’s potential list of running mates, was among his introducers at the event that cost individuals up to $300,000 for tickets and up to $500,000 for couples.

“He said if there were no cheating, I would win this election today,” said Harmeet Dhillon, a San Francisco attorney whose firm represents the Trump campaign and attended the fundraiser. “But there is cheating so we have to be vigilant. He talked about how this time around, we would do things different, that we’ve got a lot of smart lawyers and volunteers lined up and things like that.”

Politics

5 Big Moments in the Texas Republican Senate Race

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5 Big Moments in the Texas Republican Senate Race

After a heated and expensive campaign, the Republican Senate race in Texas between Senator John Cornyn and state Attorney General Ken Paxton will culminate in a runoff on Tuesday.

Mr. Cornyn, who has had a long career in Texas Republican politics and who has been an occasional critic of President Trump, is fighting for political survival against Mr. Paxton, who has been a magnet for scandal and recently won the president’s endorsement, giving him a big boost heading into the final stretch.

The race has been full of twists and turns. Here are five big moments from one of the marquee G.O.P. contests of the 2026 election cycle:

After weeks of teasing a potential bid to unseat Mr. Cornyn, Mr. Paxton officially announced his run in an interview on Fox News and published his campaign website, which prominently featured a photo of him with Mr. Trump.

Why it mattered: Mr. Paxton’s candidacy ensured that Mr. Cornyn would have a high-profile, MAGA-aligned challenger running to his right. Though Mr. Paxton had undergone an impeachment trial in 2023 over corruption allegations, he survived and positioned himself as the preferred candidate of the conservative base in Texas. Immediately, the contest became a high-profile test of the mood of the G.O.P. in Mr. Trump’s second term.

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Just a few months after Mr. Paxton’s campaign announcement, Ms. Paxton announced that she was seeking a divorce from Mr. Paxton “on biblical grounds.” She attributed the impetus for her decision to “recent discoveries,” and the divorce petition she filed in court said the “respondent has committed adultery.” Mr. Paxton said the relationship had been strained by the pressure of public life and requested privacy.

Why it mattered: Mr. Cornyn’s camp and his allies seized on the allegations and began using them against Mr. Paxton. Mr. Cornyn suggested that the primary would become “a test of character” for his opponent.

Mr. Hunt, one of the first Black Republicans to represent Texas in Congress, entered the race relatively late, offering himself as an alternative to what he called “the blood feud between Ken Paxton and John Cornyn.” Mr. Hunt specifically targeted Mr. Cornyn’s campaign, saying that his first priority if elected would be to repeal a bipartisan gun control measure that Mr. Cornyn had helped negotiate.

Why it mattered: Mr. Hunt’s candidacy created a three-way race that raised the likelihood of a runoff for the top two finishers, which is triggered in Texas if no candidate wins a majority in the primary. Mr. Cornyn’s campaign immediately attacked Mr. Hunt once he announced his campaign, while Mr. Paxton’s campaign welcomed the new Republican challenger.

Mr. Cornyn, powered by a substantial cash advantage, finished with about 42 percent of the vote, just ahead of Mr. Paxton, who won more than 40 percent of the vote. Mr. Hunt finished a distant third and was eliminated.

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Why it mattered: In some ways, this was one of the highest points of Mr. Cornyn’s campaign. He secured a first-place finish ahead of Mr. Paxton. At the same time, his showing was not enough to spare him a runoff, and it was not enough to win an endorsement from Mr. Trump that some allies had hoped would soon follow.

Though the president initially considered backing Mr. Cornyn after the primary in March, Mr. Trump ultimately decided to back Mr. Paxton, praising the state attorney general’s loyalty and unwavering support.

Why it mattered: Mr. Trump’s endorsement continues to be the most powerful stamp of approval in Republican contests, even as the president’s approval rating among all voters has sunk to a second term low. Tuesday’s vote will be an immediate test of the value of the endorsement. A Paxton win would be a victory for Mr. Trump. But in the eyes of some other national Republicans, it would weaken the party’s chances in the general election.

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‘After your boy’: Hasan Piker lashes out over fed probe into Cuba trip

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‘After your boy’: Hasan Piker lashes out over fed probe into Cuba trip

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Marxist political influencer Hasan Piker is lashing out over a federal inquiry into his recent trip to communist Cuba, calling it an “intimidation tactic” prompted by his harsh stance on Israel and the U.S.

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The response by Piker — echoed by other leaders from Democratic Socialists of America and pro-communist and anti-Israel leaders — illustrates how quickly the Cuba “solidarity” movement, pro-communist influencers and anti-Israel activist networks converged online to frame the federal inquiry not as a sanctions or foreign influence investigation, but as political repression aimed at broader anti-capitalist, anti-Western, anti-Israel activist movements.

Piker told followers during a livestream on Twitch Sunday afternoon that he is being targeted for being a “loudmouth” and “rabble-rouser,” criticizing Israel and the “fascist” United States.

Fox News Digital reported Saturday that the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control has sent administrative subpoenas to Piker and leftist CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin to get documents about the financial, logistical and communications details of their March trips to Cuba, in possible violation of laws and regulations about doing business with the government of Cuba.

“It’s not great,” Piker told his followers in the early minutes of his livestream on Sunday afternoon. “The news is not great, okay? Um, I mean, it’s bulls—. But still not great…I mean it’s bulls— but still not great that they’re after your boy. They’re up my a–.”

Piker didn’t respond to requests for comment, although he acknowledged receiving the queries as he spoke to his followers during his livestream. He said that he got his trip cleared by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, saying, “Everything we did was cleared by Treasury.”

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The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control didn’t respond to a request for comment.

By the end of his segment on the federal inquiry, Piker pivoted from the Cuba sanctions inquiry to argue that the scrutiny was really driven by backlash to his comments on Israel.

“A lot of this, by the way, does still have a lot to do with Israel,” he said, charging that his critics “don’t like that I talk s— about Israel” and “don’t like that I am a loudmouth, a rabble-rouser.”

He claimed the investigation was not “just about Cuba” but also about his role in boosting anti-Israel voters and candidates.

“They recognize that Democrats and young people are against Israel” and see him “campaigning with candidates who are anti-Israel, and they are winning their races,” he said.

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FEDS SUBPOENA HASAN PIKER, MEDEA BENJAMIN OVER CUBA TRIPS

Marxist political influencer Hasan Piker stands outside his home in West Hollywood, Calif., on May 12, 2026, pointing silently to his dog Kaya to direct her back into his home. (MB/Splash for Fox News Digital)

Piker’s response followed a pattern that has become common among online activist influencers under scrutiny: reframing a legal or regulatory inquiry as political persecution while broadening the issue into a sweeping ideological struggle. Rather than focus narrowly on the sanctions questions surrounding the Cuba trip, Piker repeatedly cast himself as the victim of a coordinated campaign by “Israel first” Democrats, pro-Israel activists, mainstream media figures and the “fascist” Trump administration.

He frequently shifted the conversation away from the specifics of Treasury’s inquiry and toward a larger narrative in which the federal government is allegedly criminalizing anti-Israel activism, anti-capitalist politics and opposition to U.S. foreign policy. He sought to portray the investigation as evidence that powerful political and media institutions are targeting dissenting voices who challenge establishment positions on Israel, Cuba and American foreign policy.

At one point, Piker said he created a mini-documentary about life in Cuba during his March trip, saying he was serving as a journalist. In other moments, he has described the mission as a “humanitarian” effort, framing his trip as providing “humanitarian aid” to the people of Cuba.

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Piker also characterized the controversy using language increasingly emerging from socialist, communist and anti-capitalist movements online, where activists have used the phrase “Epstein class” as shorthand for wealthy elites and the supposed moral corruption of American capitalism. The rhetoric repeats the propaganda of U.S. adversaries, including Cuba, China, the Islamic Republic of Iran and Russia.

He read a comment from a fan, who wrote, “We’ll free you, my brother.”

POWER COUPLE OF CHAOS: HOW A TYCOON AND ACTIVIST BUILT A ‘REVOLUTIONARY BASE’ AT THE HOUSE OF SINGHAM

Hasan Piker, a Democratic Socialists of America member, and CodePink co-founder Jodie Evans meet in Havana, Cuba, as part of a “United Front” supporting the communist regime. (CodePink via Storyful)

Piker responded, “I’m seemingly going to be made an example of…in America’s galloping toward fascism.”

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He batted away suspicions that Elon Musk made a “boss call” to subpoena Piker after he did an interview yesterday with Ashley St. Clair, the mother of a baby with Musk. The two are going through a custody dispute.

“I haven’t gotten anything yet,” said Piker.

“Yes, I’ll get lawyered up,” he said, in response to a follower.

He said he needed a lawyer with expertise on the First Amendment and “knowledgeable on OFAC.”

“I haven’t had anything happen to me yet,” he said. “And it’s not like anything I’ve done.”

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Saturday evening, Piker posted on X that “the American govt would rather try to criminalize delivering aid to a country we’d starved, than punish the Epstein class.”

MEDIA TAPS TWITCH STAR WHO TOLD VIEWERS TO ‘KILL’ REPUBLICANS FOR COMMENT ON CHARLIE KIRK’S ASSASSINATION

CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin arrives home in Washington, D.C., on May 11, 2026, with her partner TIghe Barry. (LG for Fox News Digital)

At 10:51 p.m., CodePink’s Benjamin posted: “Taking medical supplies to pediatric hospitals in Cuba is now a crime? Saving the lives of babies is a crime? The administration is beyond grotesque.”

Benjamin repeated the movement’s broader framing of the Cuba trips as “humanitarian” missions, even as organizers and participants repeatedly paired the aid campaigns with overt political rhetoric condemning the Trump administration, U.S. sanctions policy and what activists described as “imperialism” and “settler colonialism” in Cuba and Latin America.

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Piker’s uncle, far-left commentator Cenk Ugyur, the co-founder of Justice Democrats, a socialist organization that helped elect Ilhan Omar, Rashida Talib and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to Congress in 2018, defended him online Saturday night.

“Government apparently sent some bullshit subpoena to Hasan,” Ugyur wrote. “They’re tightening the noose on speech. Remember, they’ll always have an excuse or some technicality. It’s not like they’re going to tell you, ‘We did it because we don’t like what you’re saying.’”

Uygur then linked the investigation to broader left-wing claims about suppression of pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel speech, arguing the government was using legal and procedural mechanisms to target political dissent rather than directly censoring viewpoints.

WHO IS HASAN PIKER? MEET THE FAR-LEFT STREAMER WHO IS STIRRING UP CONTROVERSY ONLINE AND DIVIDING DEMOCRATS

Piker called CodePink co-founder Jodie Evans a “wonderful person.” He took a photo in Havana with Evans, which she shared on her Instagram account from Cuba.

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A little after 3 p.m., one hour and 12 minutes into his livestream, Piker acknowledged, “I would much rather not have to deal with this.”

Half an hour later, he insisted that he was being targeted for his strong opposition to the existence of the state of Israel, playing a clip of Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., as they spoke about the growing tide of anti-semitism, including from Piker.

At one point, Piker scoffed as the two lawmakers discussed increasing reports of antisemitism in the U.S.

Piker later moved on to a segment supporting the the Islamic Republic of Iran in its talks with the U.S. and Israel to end the war in Iran, mocking the Israel delegation’s “chirping,” critiquing U.S. foreign policy for allegedly letting “Israel take control over our entire Middle East policy” and moving the focus of his monologue to a critique of the “Zionist” state of Israel and the “rogue” United States.

Fox News Digital’s Sophia Compton contributed to this report.

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As influencers rise in politics, some call for tighter regulations on payments

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As influencers rise in politics, some call for tighter regulations on payments

In the 2024 election, hundreds of social media influencers were credentialed for the first time to attend the Democratic and Republican conventions. They have been invited to holiday parties in the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion, to political rallies in Texas and to events at the White House by both the Biden and Trump administrations.

The role of influencers is surging as candidates and groups across the political spectrum see their social media feeds and personas as a pathway to younger audiences and harder-to-reach groups of voters.

“You have that sense of authenticity, like a friend is talking to you,” said Emma Briant, a professor at Notre Dame University’s Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society who studies propaganda.

That’s exactly what campaigns are hoping to harness when they partner with influencers, she said.

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But the nature of that partnership has come into question in California’s hotly contested gubernatorial race after it emerged that a number of content creators — some with millions of followers, others with only a handful — had taken payments from the campaign of Democratic candidate Tom Steyer and not disclosed that they were paid to create those posts.

Some popular content creators have felt the need to explain themselves to their audience. Others have questioned how common such under-the-table payments might be, since there are no disclosure requirements for paid content at the federal level and few jurisdictions have any rules mandating it.

Some campaign finance advocates are concerned that voters could increasingly be influenced by social media posts that they don’t know are sponsored.

“The problem is that it doesn’t look like an ad,” said Saurav Ghosh, a former enforcement attorney at the Federal Election Commission. “It ends up really getting people at a place where they’re not skeptical and not able to tell the difference between what’s voluntary and where the influencer is acting as a paid spokesperson.”

Ghosh is now the director of campaign finance reform at the nonprofit Campaign Legal Center, which has filed a petition asking the FEC to require disclaimers on paid content created by influencers.

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Roughly 1 in 5 Americans said they regularly got news from social media influencers in 2024, according to the Pew Research Center, and that number was nearly double for younger adults between the ages of 18 and 29.

Working with social media creators can be an easy way for candidates to try to boost their image, particularly with a younger audience.

“If they don’t have big personalities, maybe partnering with some influencers who seem cool and fun can make you seem cool and fun also through association,” said Link Lauren, a political influencer and podcaster who served as a communications advisor for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential campaign in 2024.

California is one of the few places that requires disclosure of sponsored social media posts, but the 2023 law that created those rules hadn’t gotten much of a workout before the issue was raised in this contest through a series of dueling complaints with California’s Fair Political Practices Commission. The commission has yet to weigh in on the various accusations.

Under the law, influencers are required to provide disclosure that a post was sponsored and say who paid for it. Political groups are required to notify paid creators of the requirement.

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Even if the commission finds that violations have occurred, the penalties are not especially harsh.

Violation of the law carries no civil, criminal or administrative penalties. The FPPC can take alleged violators to court and ask a judge to force compliance. And violations can be penalized with a fine of up to $5,000 per instance.

Influencers reporting influencers

In the gubernatorial race, the issue of compliance was raised, naturally, by a pair of influencers.

Beatrice Gomberg has built up a following of more than 180,000 followers on TikTok, where she posts under the handle antiplasticlady. Her side gig of creating nonplastic children’s cups and lunch boxes became her main gig after she lost her human resources job at Macy’s during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I started doing social media because I didn’t want to hire a marketing company,” Gomberg said.

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Gomberg’s posts were initially largely focused on research related to plastic, but have become increasingly political over time. When campaigns put out the call for influencers to meet with candidates, Gomberg answered.

She interviewed Katie Porter, she met with Xavier Becerra. And it was at a Becerra event in April when she met Kaitlyn Hennessy, another influencer focused on politics.

They found that the world of online influencers can be isolating. “We stare in front of our phones,” Hennessy said. “You don’t want to see our screen time.”

As they scrolled through social media posts about the governor’s race, they found a cause to unite them.

They kept seeing videos posted by social media accounts espousing similar messages in support of Tom Steyer. Hennessy wondered at first if they were actually created by artificial intelligence.

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They found that the posts seemed to be created by a network of women who, in some cases, had created several different profiles to promote a variety of products.

They pored over Steyer’s campaign disclosures and saw that the campaign listed payments to several prominent influencers — including one with the handle Zay Dante, with 1.8 million followers on TikTok — who had not disclosed creating paid content for the campaign.

The pair filed a complaint laying out their allegations, which the Steyer campaign has called “baseless.”

In the wake of their complaint, Steyer defended his campaign’s use of paid influencers, writing on Substack that his campaign believed content creators should be paid for their work and that the campaign had been transparent about disclosing those payments.

In a separate post, influencer Carlos Eduardo Espina said he had been paid $400,000 for work he has done for the Steyer campaign. Espina, who has more than 14 million followers on TikTok, is an advisor to the campaign, which was publicly announced.

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“You will never see anything on my channels that I don’t believe in, or that I think goes against the best interest of my community. No one buys my opinion. But I also think it’s fair to be compensated for my work,” he wrote on Substack.

Not everyone is ready to accept payment for posts.

Lauren, the influencer who advised Kennedy’s campaign, said that while he doesn’t begrudge other influencers accepting sponsorship, he chooses not to.

“A passive viewer might think you really believe this,” he said. “I have a strong connection with my audience. I really consider them my family.”

Lauren said he favors disclosure requirements.

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Briant, the propaganda researcher, said she is concerned about the possibility of foreign actors trying to influence Americans through paid posts.

In 2024, for example, federal prosecutors filed an indictment alleging that Russian state media employees had paid nearly $10 million to a Tennessee company that paid popular right-wing social media influencers to unwittingly produce pro-Russia content.

Briant said she believes that the only way to counteract increased manipulation through social media influencers is to impose harsh penalties when paid content is not disclosed.

“Ultimately, it’s a wild west at the moment if there are no repercussions for not doing it,” she said.

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