Every state agency in California, along with any city or county that wants in, can now run Anthropic’s Claude at half price. Governor Gavin Newsom announced the partnership on June 29, describing it as a first-of-its-kind arrangement between a state government and a frontier AI lab. The deal goes beyond a discount. It bundles in free workforce training and direct technical support from Anthropic’s own developers.
“This partnership is about using technology the California way: responsibly, transparently, and in service of people,” Newsom said in the announcement. “AI should not replace the human work of government; it should help our workers move faster, solve problems more effectively, and deliver better results for Californians.”
What the agreement covers
Under the terms, state agencies can license Claude, Anthropic’s AI assistant, at a 50 percent discount. The same offer extends to California’s local governments, including cities and counties, which means a small municipal office gets the same pricing as a sprawling state department. Anthropic is also throwing in free training for government workers and what the governor’s office calls expert technical assistance and workflow input from the company’s developers.
The state expects employees to use Claude for drafting and summarizing documents, analyzing information, and handling the kind of routine work that piles up inside any large bureaucracy.
Claude is already inside California’s government
This is less a pilot program than a formalization of something already underway. The California DMV is using Claude to improve customer service and cut wait times. The Department of Health Care Services, the largest Medicaid agency in the country, uses it for internal workflows that support Medicaid recipients. The state’s technology department and its Office of Emergency Services are partnering on cyber defense, using Claude to scan, triage, and patch state code.
Claude also powers parts of Engaged California, the state’s deliberative democracy platform, and was used in building Poppy, an AI tool designed by state workers for state workers, built around pre-made queries for common government tasks.
A new front door for government AI purchasing
Claude will be the first AI productivity tool offered through the California Department of Technology’s new Statewide Information Technology Shared Services portal, known as SITeS. The portal is designed to centralize AI tools in one place with transparent pricing, so individual departments no longer have to negotiate their own contracts from scratch.
“CDT is partnering with departments across the state to leverage the state’s purchasing power to make it easy to procure new tools, fast and for the best price,” said Chris Given, California’s chief information officer and director of the Department of Technology.
Why Anthropic wants this deal
For Anthropic, the partnership is both a homecoming and a signal. “As a California company, we feel a real responsibility to our home state,” said Kate Jensen, Anthropic’s head of Americas. “Building AI responsibly and in service of people has been our approach from the start, and that’s exactly what this partnership puts into practice.”
The state is a market worth winning. According to the governor’s office, 33 of the world’s top 50 private AI companies are based in California, and no state has moved faster on AI policy. Newsom signed the Transparency in Frontier Technology Act, the first state law of its kind, and issued the nation’s first executive order on generative AI in government back in 2023. A government that regulates AI aggressively and buys it at scale is a customer every lab wants on its side.
The open question is how quickly other states follow. California has effectively written a template: discounted access, free training, and a central procurement portal in exchange for a flagship public-sector customer. If the model works, expect versions of it in other state capitals within the year. For more coverage of AI policy and government technology, visit Mylistingo.







