There's not a Swift problem here, but one with the underlying OS / platform and font support.
let california = "🏳\u{E0075}\u{E0073}\u{E0063}\u{E0061}\u{E007F}"
california.count // .characters not needed / deprecated in Swift 4
This correctly returns 1 — according to Swift's string processing system, you have a single emoji character here.
However, just because Swift sees it as a single character per the Unicode 10.0 / Emoji 5.0 spec doesn't mean that whatever platform you're running on knows how to display that character. Whether you see the correct flag image for any given tag sequence depends on whether the platform and font you're viewing that sequence with includes an image/glyph for that tag sequence.
The AppleColorEmoji font included with macOS, iOS, and other Apple platforms includes glyphs for some of the regional/subdivision flag tag sequences defined by that spec, not every possible ISO 3166-2 region. Specifically, the font includes only those three region tags called out in the Unicode 10.0 / Emoji 5.0 spec as Recommended for General Interchange (as noted in the pages your question links to): 🏴England, 🏴Scotland, and 🏴Wales.
A platform/font vendor such as Apple or Twitter is allowed to provide font glyphs/images for other ISO 3166-2 region tag sequences. (But the spec doesn't require one to provide such in order to claim compliance, so most vendors don't.) In Apple's case, you can at least file bugs to request support for more... perhaps they could be talked into supporting California so that the fine print on every Mac can say something like "👩🎨 by in 🏳"?