Newsom’s empty promises leave Californians parched while water crisis spirals out of control

California is drying up, and Governor Gavin Newsom’s big water plan is about as useful as a leaky faucet. The Palisades reservoir is empty, and so are Newsom’s promises. Californians are watching our water disappear while Newsom stands in front of cameras, patting himself on the back—again—for coming up with “solutions” that, surprise, solve nothing.

What’s Newsom’s answer to the water crisis? More committees. More “studies.” More paperwork for Sacramento bureaucrats. Instead of building new reservoirs or boosting actual water storage, he wants to shuffle money and wave around “climate change” slogans. If you’re hoping for water in your tap next summer, don’t hold your breath. Newsom is too busy chasing headlines for his next political career move to tackle the real problem.

Let’s be honest: California’s liberal leaders have had years to fix this. Decades, even. Yet, time after time, they choose flashy press conferences over real solutions. Farmers watch their crops wilt, and families wonder if water will be rationed next. Meanwhile, eco-activists and their friends at City Hall make sure we protect every puddle for fish instead of letting humans thrive. Newsom talks about saving the planet, but he can’t even save his own state.

It gets worse: instead of investing in infrastructure, Newsom keeps dumping cash into pet projects that have nothing to do with water. Is he protecting Californians, or just saving face for his pals in Hollywood and the globalist elite? Newsom is always quick to point fingers at “climate change,” but never admits the state’s leaders have failed basic management. Maybe he’s too busy planning his next campaign to worry about whether regular folks have safe water to drink.

There’s nothing bold or new about this governor’s “plan.” It’s just another weak attempt to distract voters from years of mismanagement. Californians deserve leaders who care more about actual water—and less about political theater. When Sacramento politicians think “drought relief” means another press event, ask yourself: are they drying out the land on purpose, or just their own credibility?

Source: NY Post


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