CORRUPTION ALERT! Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Wife Used State Funding To Get Benefits For Her Non-Profit

Credit: Fox News

Jennifer Siebel Newsom, the wife of California Governor Gavin Newsom, pushed for state funding that benefitted her own nonprofit.

She is credited as the main driving force behind the $4.7 billion in mental health funding that her husband championed last year. The initiative included hiring 10,000 school counselors.

Siebel Newsom founded The Representation Project nonprofit which touches on mental health issues. Her group licenses “gender justice” films and curricula to thousands of public schools in every state. It has brought in at least $1.5 million in revenue from fees since 2012.

In California, the billions in mental health funding will now create a greater demand for her nonprofit, which will ultimately boost its bottom line.

Loretta Whitson, the director of the California Association of School Counselors, acknowledged this fact.

“While the governor’s recent investment will add additional school counselors to the workforce, there will be an even greater need to access films and curriculum support material such as Siebel Newsom’s documentary series,” Whitson told EdSource in November. “(We) would love to work with her and support her efforts.”

Siebel Newsom’s influence grew after Gov. Newsom created the Office of the First Partner in 2019. This office includes nine staffers and has received almost $5 million in funding.

From that office, Siebel Newsom can promote her policy agenda, with the help of taxpayer funds.

Fox News reported:

The first partner also deals with children’s mental health concerns through The Representation Project, which she established in 2012 to fight “sexism through films education, research and activism.” She writes and directs “gender identity” films produced through her for-profit operation, Girls Club Entertainment. Public schools then license the movies from her nonprofit by paying fees ranging between $49 and $599.

Siebel Newsom’s films, which include “Miss Representation,” “The Mask You Live In,” “The Great American Lie” and “Fair Play,” sometimes contain sexually explicit imagery and at points push students to feel “shame and sorrow” about American society split by privilege and oppression, Fox News Digital previously reported.

Several of Siebel Newsom’s movies also promote her husband. The curriculum accompanying the films pushes students into political and social activism, including urging students to gather friends and vote for politicians that support a “care economy” that “embraces universal human values.”

“The Newsoms might consider their legalized pay-to-play scheme a virtuous circle,” said Open The Books founder Adam Andrzejewski. His watchdog group has extensively tracked Siebel Newsom’s nonprofit.

“In fact, it’s a model of endless mutual benefit for the friends and members of Newsom, Inc. – that’s paid for by taxpayers. It’s a closed-loop system. The Newsoms create the problems, ‘solve’ them, and cash checks along the way.”

Gov. Newsom said that the COVID-19 pandemic added more stress for children when he revealed the billions toward mental health initiatives. 

Interestingly enough, his policies and lockdown measures were some of the strictest in the country. In May of 2021, only half of California schools were open for in-person instruction.

“Our investigation illustrates the power Siebel Newsom has to both lay the groundwork for her social and political agenda in classrooms and then put on her hat as first partner to advocate and implement hard policy changes,” Andrzejewski continued. 

“As wins stack up for the governor to tout, so, too, do they stack up for Siebel Newsom’s nonprofit, her production house and even special interest groups like the California Association of School Counselors.”

The Representation Project recently came under fire after the Sacramento Bee reported that several of its publicly disclosed donors were also trying to influence Gov. Newsom.

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