In growing fight, Steyer’s campaign says pro-Becerra influencers didn’t disclose pay
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ In the latest escalation of a fight over the use of paid social media creators, Tom Steyerβs campaign for governor filed a complaint Tuesday accusing influencers who posted content supportive of Xavier Becerraβs campaign of failing to disclose that they had been paid, which is required by California law.
One of the two influencers accused, however, said she had not been paid by the Becerra campaign to create posts supporting his candidacy.
The complaint, filed with Californiaβs Fair Political Practices Commission, accuses Jay Gonzalez of producing at least 14 pro-Becerra posts on Instagram and Facebook in late April and early May, after he was hired by the campaign, and only belatedly editing the posts to acknowledge they had been sponsored by the campaign.
The complaint also said that a social media creator named Maggie Reed, who posts under the username mermaidmamamaggie, created four pro-Becerra posts on Instagram and had previously offered to create paid posts for another gubernatorial campaign.
The complaint alleges that Becerraβs campaign failed to disclose payments to both influencers in its campaign filings.
But Reed said she had not been paid by the Becerra campaign for her posts.
βI have never accepted, nor have I been offered, money from Xavier Becerraβs campaign. I endorsed Becerra because of his policies and proven track record,β Reed said in a statement.
The Becerra campaign maintained that it has not paid influencers who have created posts in support of the campaign.
βAll of the content you see online is entirely and purely organic,β said Becerra spokesman Jonathan Underland.
Becerra and Steyer have been the top two Democratic candidates in recent polling for the governorβs race, with Becerra consistently maintaining a slight edge in those polls.
The complaint by Steyerβs campaign comes after two influencers who support Becerra filed a complaint last week accusing social media creators hired by the Steyer campaign of failing to disclose that they had been paid to produce their posts.
The campaign of the billionaire candidate for governor had previously disclosed payments to some influencers with large audiences, including one creator with the user name zayydante, who has 1.8 million followers on TikTok, and another with the user name littleyeg, who has nearly 350,000 followers on TikTok. The complaint filed last week said that both of these influencers failed to disclose that they had been paid by the campaign to produce content.
The complaint also highlighted several accounts created by user who donβt appear to live in California who created posts promoting Steyer and, in at least one case, posted elsewhere that they had been paid by the campaign.
The influencers who filed the original complaint said they saw the newly filed complaint as an attempt by Steyerβs campaign to deflect criticism.
βAll heβs done is attack his opponent instead of taking accountability for violating the law,β said Kaitlyn Hennessy, one of the two influencers who filed the complaint against Steyerβs campaign. Hennessy and the other influencer who filed the complaint both said they have not been paid by the Becerra campaign.
In a post on Substack, Steyer defended his campaignβs use of paid social media influencers and said that it had been transparent about their use.
βEvery creator we compensate has been and will be publicly disclosed as required by law,β he wrote.
Under a California law passed in 2023, social media creators who create paid content on behalf of a political campaign are required to disclose in their post that the material was sponsored and who paid for it.
The onus is on creators to provide the disclosure, but campaigns are required to notify influencers they hire of the requirement.
Violation of the rules doesnβt trigger criminal, civil or administrative penalties but the FPPC can take alleged offenders to court and ask a judge to force compliance with the law.