Add The California Post on Google Federal investigators are reportedly examining the finances and nonprofit activities of Jennifer Siebel Newsom, California’s “first partner” and wife of Gov. Gavin Newsom. The governor went public Monday, accusing President Donald Trump of orchestrating the probes as political revenge against a potential 2028 presidential rival.
Jennifer Siebel Newsom is not simply the governor’s wife caught in a crossfire. She is the founder of multiple nonprofit organizations. She is a public advocate who has used her position to influence public policy. She is associated with organizations that have received millions of dollars from donors, including those with direct interests before state government.
That makes her a public figure, a political actor, and a participant in California’s influence ecosystem.
California Governor Gavin Newsom speaking at the U.S. Conference of Mayors’ 94th Annual Meeting. David Buchan for Ca Post For years, Californians have been told that the first partner’s initiatives deserve public attention, media coverage, donor support, and a seat at the policymaking table. If that is true, those same activities cannot suddenly become off limits the moment investigators start asking questions.
According to multiple news reports, federal investigators are conducting at least two probes connected to the Newsom family. One focuses on Jennifer Siebel Newsom’s personal taxes. Another examines her nonprofit organizations, including the California Partners Project and the Representation Project, looking at financial relationships, donors, and affiliated entities.
Newsom’s former chief of staff, Dana Williamson, pleaded guilty last month to three felonies, including lying to the FBI about passing confidential state litigation information to former clients for their personal benefit — crimes committed while she worked inside the governor’s office.
Siebel Newsom, 51, is a documentary filmmaker and nonprofit founder. AFP via Getty Images That does not implicate Newsom or his wife. But federal investigators are already deeply familiar with the inner workings of his political operation.
Those facts do not establish wrongdoing. They do establish that scrutiny is warranted.
Reporting has highlighted payments from the Representation Project to Girls Club Entertainment — a film production company that Jennifer Siebel Newsom also owns — totaling $161,250 in 2024 alone. She was also reportedly paid a $150,000 salary from the Representation Project. A nonprofit she controls paid six figures to a company she controls, while also paying her six figures personally.
Gov. Newsom has also reported soliciting millions of dollars in behested payments — donations made to favored charities at a politician’s personal solicitation — directed to the California Partners Project since 2020. That reportedly includes $1.8 million from a Native American tribe holding a state casino agreement.
None of that proves corruption. But it raises serious questions about the intersection of political power, donor money, nonprofit fundraising, and personal benefit — questions that deserve answers, not dismissal.
Newsom’s political strategy is transparent. If the story becomes Donald Trump versus Gavin Newsom, many Californians will instinctively choose sides.
The real issue is whether organizations connected to California’s First Family operated appropriately when donor money, political influence, and public office intersected.
Questions are not convictions. Investigations are not indictments. But neither are they political persecution simply because the governor declares them to be.
Complicating Newsom’s narrative further: both investigations have reportedly been underway for about a year — launched by federal prosecutors in Sacramento based on whistleblower tips and local sources, not directed from Washington.
Media sources disputed that the probes were politically motivated.
If those reports are accurate, the governor’s preferred explanation collapses.
The public deserves answers about the financial and political networks that have developed around California’s First Family. Californians should reject the demand that those networks are somehow beyond scrutiny.
The governor can call it a vendetta. Californians should call it accountability.
Jon Fleischman, a longtime strategist in California politics, writes at SoDoesItMatter.com