WASHINGTON — Within the newest escalation of a struggle over using paid social media creators, Tom Steyer’s marketing campaign for governor filed a criticism Tuesday accusing influencers who posted content material supportive of Xavier Becerra’s marketing campaign of failing to reveal that that they had been paid, which is required by California regulation.
One of many two influencers accused, nevertheless, stated she had not been paid by the Becerra marketing campaign to create posts supporting his candidacy.
The criticism, filed with California’s Truthful Political Practices Fee, accuses Jay Gonzalez of manufacturing not less than 14 pro-Becerra posts on Instagram and Fb in late April and early Could, after he was employed by the marketing campaign, and solely belatedly modifying the posts to acknowledge that they had been sponsored by the marketing campaign.
The criticism additionally stated {that a} social media creator named Maggie Reed, who posts below the username mermaidmamamaggie, created 4 pro-Becerra posts on Instagram and had beforehand supplied to create paid posts for an additional gubernatorial marketing campaign.
The criticism alleges that Becerra’s marketing campaign did not disclose funds to each influencers in its marketing campaign filings.
However Reed stated she had not been paid by the Becerra marketing campaign for her posts.
“I’ve by no means accepted, nor have I been supplied, cash from Xavier Becerra’s marketing campaign. I endorsed Becerra due to his insurance policies and confirmed observe report,” Reed stated in a press release.
The Becerra marketing campaign maintained that it has not paid influencers who’ve created posts in help of the marketing campaign.
“The entire content material you see on-line is fully and purely natural,” stated Becerra spokesman Jonathan Underland.
Becerra and Steyer have been the highest two Democratic candidates in latest polling for the governor’s race, with Becerra constantly sustaining a slight edge in these polls.
The criticism by Steyer’s marketing campaign comes after two influencers who help Becerra filed a criticism final week accusing social media creators employed by the Steyer marketing campaign of failing to reveal that that they had been paid to supply their posts.
The marketing campaign of the billionaire candidate for governor had beforehand disclosed funds to some influencers with massive audiences, together with one creator with the consumer title zayydante, who has 1.8 million followers on TikTok, and one other with the consumer title littleyeg, who has almost 350,000 followers on TikTok. The criticism filed final week stated that each of those influencers did not disclose that that they had been paid by the marketing campaign to supply content material.
The criticism additionally highlighted a number of accounts created by consumer who don’t seem to stay in California who created posts selling Steyer and, in not less than one case, posted elsewhere that that they had been paid by the marketing campaign.
The influencers who filed the unique criticism stated they noticed the newly filed criticism as an try by Steyer’s marketing campaign to deflect criticism.
“All he’s finished is assault his opponent as an alternative of taking accountability for violating the regulation,” stated Kaitlyn Hennessy, one of many two influencers who filed the criticism in opposition to Steyer’s marketing campaign. Hennessy and the opposite influencer who filed the criticism each stated they haven’t been paid by the Becerra marketing campaign.
In a put up on Substack, Steyer defended his marketing campaign’s use of paid social media influencers and stated that it had been clear about their use.
“Each creator we compensate has been and will probably be publicly disclosed as required by regulation,” he wrote.
Below a California regulation handed in 2023, social media creators who create paid content material on behalf of a political marketing campaign are required to reveal of their put up that the fabric was sponsored and who paid for it.
The onus is on creators to offer the disclosure, however campaigns are required to inform influencers they rent of the requirement.
Violation of the principles doesn’t set off legal, civil or administrative penalties however the FPPC can take alleged offenders to court docket and ask a choose to power compliance with the regulation.

