
Gavin Newsom: Trolling Trump | Biography Flash
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About this listen
In the past few days, California Governor Gavin Newsom has cranked the volume on both political theater and policy action, positioning himself as both Donald Trump’s loudest sparring partner and a headline driver in his own right. Over the Labor Day weekend, Newsom ignited social media by mimicking Trump’s signature style in a parody X post, serving a scathing message that riffed on Trump’s familiar catchphrases. He wished a Happy Labor Day “to all, including the scum that is trying to destroy our country with a sick, warped, radical mind,” continuing with biting references to tariffs, J6, and what he called “the monsters who want our country to go to hell.” Newsom underlined to tech journalist Kara Swisher that the point is not just to mock Trump but to serve up a mirror to the right-wing media ecosystem, calling them “chatbots for the administration.” Latin Times captured the directness—and the deliberate provocation—of this messaging.
Doubling down, Newsom released an Instagram video montage poking fun at Trump’s health issues, setting the clips to Reba McEntire’s “I’m a Survivor.” The video highlighted Trump’s recent bruised hands—publicly discussed since his diagnosis with chronic venous insufficiency—and past on-camera embarrassments, sharply contrasting Trump’s image with the struggles described in the song—something The Independent reported as deliberate trolling that finally provoked Trump to respond, branding Newsom “the man who is destroying the once Great State of California” on Truth Social.
Beyond the memes, Newsom expanded the deployment of the California Highway Patrol in more California cities—a move announced during a press conference last Thursday and covered by KTVU FOX 2—as part of a continuing campaign to tackle crime. Newsom emphasized what he called “Takeown Tuesdays,” a regular effort to boost transparency by highlighting progress in these operations.
Meanwhile, according to Hindustan Times, Newsom took to X to aim another veiled swipe at Trump by sharing video of international leaders including Modi, Putin, and Xi, just as Trump ramped up talk of deploying National Guard troops in Chicago. Newsom’s post was positioned as a dig at Trump’s “tough guy” tactics during a time when immigration crackdowns and federal interventions are making bipartisan headlines.
Newsom’s increasingly savvy and aggressive use of social media—detailing campaign merchandise, from his own “Newsom 2026” mugs to hats boasting “Newsom was right about everything”—has not just fueled his rivalry with Trump but has solidified him as a leading Democratic contender ahead of 2028, as Publimetro described in coverage about his strategy and influence.
Sean Hannity, representing a conservative perspective, argued these moves risk alienating moderates, while local politicians like San Jose’s mayor Matt Mahan voiced frustration at what they characterized as “social media noise.”
For longtime Newsom watchers, the last few days have offered a glimpse of his evolving persona: part digital showman, part policy operator, and politically unafraid to dominate both headlines and hashtags.
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