California Governor Gavin Newsom Takes

The ruling lands at the exact moment California braces for its first full-blown generative AI election,

where anyone with a laptop can fabricate a scandal, a confession, or a conspiracy in minutes.

Judge John Mendez didn’t deny the danger; he called it out.

But he also drew a hard line:

the state cannot pre‑censor political speech, even when that speech is synthetic, manipulative, or weaponized.

In his view, the cure lawmakers offered was more dangerous to democracy than the disease.

By striking down both the deepfake ad ban and the takedown mandate for platforms,

the court left Californians with almost no guardrails—only disclosure rules, Section 230 protections, and the raw, unruly marketplace of ideas.

Supporters of the decision insist that empowering government to decide what is “true” invites abuse.

Critics warn that without targeted limits, AI-driven lies will flood campaigns faster than fact-checkers or voters can react.

Between those fears, the 2026 election is set to become a real‑time test of whether an open internet can withstand a closed grip on reality.