The Patriot Post® · Newsom Uses Ads to (Not) Improve California's Image

By Samantha Koch ·
https://patriotpost.us/articles/127168-newsom-uses-ads-to-not-improve-californias-image-2026-04-29

California Governor Gavin Newsom is once again trying to control the narrative — but this time, it’s not through policy, it’s through public relations. Recent reports reveal that his administration approved millions in taxpayer dollars for an advertising and public relations campaign aimed at reshaping how the state is perceived, both nationally and beyond.

At the center of the effort is Edelman, one of the world’s largest PR firms. According to reporting, the state awarded Edelman a contract worth roughly $19 million to promote California’s “economic opportunities, innovation, and quality of life.” The messaging is meant to gently nudge people to rethink the idea that businesses leaving the state — driven out by high costs, rising crime, and a declining quality of life — is a bad thing. Instead, we’re encouraged to reimagine those negative connotations and keep an open mind that when people are packing up and leaving in droves, it doesn’t necessarily mean anything’s wrong.

Supporters of the campaign are also helping with the cause, framing it as necessary damage control. California has taken a reputational hit in recent years, with headlines dominated by homelessness crises, retail theft, housing shortages, and businesses relocating to states with fewer regulations and lower taxes. The idea, at least on paper, is that a coordinated messaging effort can highlight the state’s strengths — its tech industry, natural beauty, and economic scale — and remind people why California, at least once upon a time, has been seen as a land of opportunity.

The pitch is simple: California isn’t what critics say it is.

The problem? People have eyes.

No amount of messaging can curb the skepticism shaped by California’s real-world struggles, which is exactly why spending $20 million in taxpayer money on image management feels, at best, completely tone-deaf. Ultimately, it’s an attempt to paper over serious problems rather than address them. If the goal is to improve California’s reputation, the more obvious solution would be to change the conditions driving that negative perception in the first place.

Even more telling is the reaction — or lack of one — from Newsom’s own party. Several Democrat lawmakers have been noticeably quiet when pressed on whether this is a responsible use of public funds. That silence speaks volumes. However, while Democrats avoided answering questions about the spending decision, their Republican colleagues didn’t hesitate to share their concerns.

Assemblyman David Tangipa said, “This is irresponsible, it looks like corruption, and it looks like he’s cutting a deal right now before he kicks off his next campaign to be the president of the United States — and it’s wrong.” Senator Roger Niello echoed that concern, adding, “This is unquestionably promoting Gavin Newsom; this is unquestionably part of his presidential campaign.”

In a state facing ongoing budget pressures and notable social challenges, defending a multimillion-dollar PR campaign isn’t exactly an easy sell. It’s hard to justify glossy ad campaigns when residents are dealing with rising living costs, struggling infrastructure, and public safety concerns — problems that a few friendly slogans won’t change.

The criticism becomes sharper when you consider the broader context. California has been grappling with multiple fraud scandals tied to taxpayer-funded programs, including allegations of widespread abuse in areas like hospice care and social services. These aren’t small, isolated incidents — they’re systemic issues that have cost taxpayers billions. And every time a new case comes to light, it reinforces the very image Newsom is trying to fix.

No amount of polished messaging can compete with headlines about waste, fraud, and mismanagement. And when stories surface about things like burrito stands and tire shops being used as addresses to register hospice clinics and siphon taxpayer funds, the disconnect is impossible to distract from. At that point, even the most well-executed PR campaign won’t convince the public that the governor is doing an effective job, let alone inspire confidence that it would translate into the ability to run the entire country any better. Because you can try to layer a pretty picture on top of a mess, but eventually the mess shows through.

There’s also the question of priorities. Taxpayer money is finite, and every dollar spent on public relations is a dollar not spent on addressing issues driving negative perceptions. Fixing homelessness, improving public safety, tackling fraud, and lowering the cost of living would do far more for California’s image than any marketing campaign ever could. But those solutions are harder, slower, and actually require you to do the job you were elected to do.

In the end, this effort is not a meaningful solution — it’s a workaround. It’s an attempt to get ahead of criticism without fully engaging with it. And while that might work in the short term — maybe even generate a few positive headlines — it doesn’t change the underlying reality.

California didn’t develop its current reputation overnight, and it won’t shake it with a series of well-produced ads. For many, the state has become a cautionary tale — a place where high ideals have collided with messy outcomes. Homelessness, crime, drug issues, and sky-high costs of living have long been the center of the national conversation about California, and Gavin Newsom is closely tied to that image.

If anything, the growing number of fraud scandals and taxpayer-funded abuses is accelerating that perception faster than any PR campaign can counter it. You can spend millions telling people California is thriving, but if the evidence screams otherwise, the message falls flat. At some point, reality takes priority over optics.