Changeflow GovPing Government & Legislation Keep Campaigning Off Official Government Social...
Routine Notice Added Final

Keep Campaigning Off Official Government Social Media, Websites

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Summary

The Washington Public Disclosure Commission has issued a reminder ahead of the 2026 general election season that campaign or election-related statements or images must remain on personal or campaign accounts and not appear on official government social media or websites. The PDC cites RCW 29B.45.010, which prohibits the use of any public resource—including money, staff time, equipment, and social media—to support or oppose any political campaign. Government entities, employees, or elected officials who re-post political advertisements or make statements supporting or opposing candidates or ballot measures on official accounts may be in violation.

Published by WA PDC on pdc.wa.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

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GovPing monitors Washington PDC for new government & legislation regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

The PDC reminder clarifies existing restrictions under Washington campaign finance law on the use of public resources for political campaign activity. Specifically, government social media accounts, websites, computers, and phones are considered public resources that cannot be used to support or oppose candidates or ballot measures. Uniformed officials such as sheriffs are advised to avoid wearing agency-issued uniforms in political advertisements, and fire districts should not stage district-owned equipment for campaign use.

Government agencies, their employees, and elected officials in Washington state should review their social media practices before the 2026 election season. Any current posts supporting or opposing candidates or measures on official accounts should be removed. Staff should be reminded that using government-owned devices for campaign activity on any platform—including personal accounts—may also violate the law. The PDC offers training through its Disclosure 101 course for candidates and committees.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Posted on March 26, 2026 As the 2026 general election season approaches, the Public Disclosure Commission is reminding sitting officials and government agencies that campaign or election-related statements or images should stay on your personal or campaign accounts, and off official government social media and websites.

RCW 29B.45.010 prohibits the use of any public resource – which could include money, staff time, publicly owned buildings, vehicles, equipment, as well as social media and websites – to support or oppose any political campaign.

Each year, the PDC receives many complaints and inquiries about these requirements, and their limited exceptions. See our guidelines for public agencies for more information on these rules.

While a political advertisement may be created by a campaign in accordance with disclosure law, a government entity then re-posting that advertisement on its social media account could be a violation. Government agencies, their employees or elected officials should refrain from re-posting or making any statements in support or opposition to candidates or local ballot measures on their official social media or webpages.

Instead, campaign messages should be posted on private or campaign accounts. Remember: using a government-owned computer or phone to conduct campaign activity on private social media accounts is also potentially a violation of this law.

Use of public facilities can come in many forms. Officials with uniforms, such as sheriffs, should be cautious when wearing those uniforms in political advertisements, unless they have personally purchased the uniform, rather than it being issued through their agency. Fire districts should also consider these rules before staging equipment owned by the district to be used in advertisements for any campaign, including bonds or levies.

The PDC covers this topic in its Disclosure 101: Candidates and Committees training. See upcoming virtual training dates here.

Named provisions

RCW 29B.45.010

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
WA PDC
Published
March 26th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Elected officials
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Campaign finance compliance Social media use Government resource restrictions
Geographic scope
Washington US-WA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Elections
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Civil Rights Employment & Labor

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