Conservative critics of Gavin Newsom's social media feed appear to miss the point
This tactics have hardly been subtle: Newsom's office recently started using social media to mock the president by emulating the president, publishing missives that are clearly intended to mimic Trump's hysterical tone and ridiculous writing style. (Some of the missives even conclude, 'Thank you for your attention to this very important matter!!!' echoing the Republican.)
The content is deliberately rude, brash, self-aggrandizing and insulting — because it's satirizing the president who uses his own social media platform to push rude, brash, self-aggrandizing and insulting content.
Some of Newsom's conservative critics appear to be missing the point of the effort.
One Fox News host complained late last week that the governor's online content 'comes across as childish' and seems unbecoming of someone who's 'the governor of the biggest state in the union.' As HuffPost noted, a different Fox News host kept this going earlier this week.
'You have to stop it with the Twitter thing,' [former White House press secretary Dana] Perino said, before adding: 'I don't know where his wife is.' ... 'If I were [Newsom's] wife, I would say, 'You are making a fool of yourself, stop it' … He's got a big job as governor of California, but if he wants an even bigger job, he has to be a little bit more serious.'
By all appearances, she was quite sincere.
In keeping with the shtick, Newsom's office published a follow-up item specifically responding to the Fox News co-host's criticism in the same way Trump tends to respond to his own media critics.
This really shouldn't be necessary, but let's go ahead and make this plain: The governor's social media team is doing a surprisingly good job sounding eerily similar to Trump. If it were me, I'd probably add a few more grammatical errors — the president has, for example, struggled to properly spell words like 'tap' — but the tone and style are spot-on.
Whether the right understands this or not, to criticize Team Newsom's content as childish, foolish and fundamentally unserious is to necessarily criticize Trump's content as childish, foolish and fundamentally unserious since the former emulates the latter.
A Politico report summarized the developments this way: 'With an inescapable, smashmouth, all-caps-laden and meme-filled X account, California Gov. Gavin Newsom is holding a mirror up to MAGA — and MAGA doesn't like what it sees.'
Or as the governor's office put it, 'ALMOST A WEEK IN AND THEY STILL DON'T GET IT.'
This article was originally published on MSNBC.com

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San Francisco Chronicle
3 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Students face new cellphone restrictions in 17 states as school year begins
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Newsweek
5 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Zohran Mamdani Remains 'Candidate to Beat' as Cuomo, Adams Slide: Poll
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In a potential three-way race with Sliwa, Mamdani received 38.5 percent to Cuomo's 30.3 percent and Sliwa's 23 percent. The survey also shows that 58.4 percent of respondents are "less likely" to vote for Mamdani after hearing his previous remarks about defunding the police. The survey shows that 23.8 percent are more likely. Mamdani's views are "too extreme," 45 percent say, while 33.9 percent say they are "about right" and 6.7 percent say, "not progressive enough." Following a deadly mass shooting in New York City in July, Mamdani addressed his prior comments on law enforcement, saying, "I am not defunding the police. I am not running to defund the police," according to CNN. The state assemblyman added that he is a "candidate who is not fixed in time, one that learns and one that leads, and part of that means admitting as I have grown." 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Shapiro to Newsweek via email Wednesday: "What we are seeing in the poll numbers that have him ahead reflect his strengths with eye-opening ideas and a style that is energizing supporters. What we are not seeing are the possible effects of his weaknesses--where he is perceived as too extreme in his policies or positions. "This is where the debates, assuming there may be more than one, will matter in that his opponents can focus on these extreme positions. This can undercut Mamdani's support but not lead to a surge in any one candidate unless at least one of the other candidates with noticeable support drops out, since the vote is being divided." Mamdani posted to X on Wednesday: "When police are made to respond to every single failure of the social safety net, this is the result: forced overtime, declining quality of life, an exodus of officers. Our proposal for a Dept. of Community Safety will allow police to do the jobs they actually signed up for." Vermont independent Senator Bernie Sanders, who has backed Mamdani, posted to X on Tuesday: "The most remarkable reality of the Mamdani campaign is how much the financial and political establishment fears him. They know that when he wins, people nationwide will be motivated to end oligarchic control of our economy and politics. We can do this! Please support Zohran." Cuomo on X Wednesday: "Public safety is job 1. The NYPD is losing officers at a record level. Rebuilding it must be a top priority. The NYPD are NY's finest. It's past time to reverse this dangerous trend to protect our city My plan will add 5,000 officers, 1,500 in the subways, with incentive bonuses to attract the best." Sliwa on X Tuesday: "Crime isn't down. You don't feel safe because you aren't. Every New Yorker deserves a safe commute. Here's my plan to make it happen as your Mayor: Adams posted to X on Tuesday: "This is the time for experience—not experiments. Not upstart political candidates, nor their short-sighted policies and platforms, but a proven track record. With record total jobs, improved housing, and our historic crime declines, New York is back—and stronger than ever under my administration. So get out and vote to re-elect me as New York City mayor to continue on our proven pathway toward safety, affordability, and dignity for all New Yorkers" What Happens Next The general election is scheduled for November 4, and analysts say the race could most likely hinge on whether independent or third-party bids by figures like Cuomo or Adams persist or whether national involvement alters turnout or vote allocation.


Fox News
5 minutes ago
- Fox News
Our country shouldn't be defined by our 'darkness,' says Debra Lea
'Fox News @ Night' panelists Debra Lea and Matt Bilinsky discuss first lady Melania Trump's letter to Vladimir Putin and the Trump administration's review of Smithsonian museums.