California Governor Gavin Newsom sharply escalated his criticism of the Trump administration by accusing President Donald Trump and the Department of Homeland Security of inflaming tensions through their handling of federal immigration enforcement in Minneapolis. In remarks to reporters, Newsom said Trump was “trying to stoke a Civil War in this country” and called the federal approach in Minneapolis “a disgrace,” language that reflected the intensity of Democratic opposition after a series of violent and highly controversial enforcement incidents in Minnesota. Reuters has reported that federal immigration operations in Minneapolis were followed by protests, deaths of U.S. citizens, and mounting conflict between local and federal authorities.
Newsom also accused DHS of intentionally heightening division, saying its messaging was “very intentionally stoking tensions” and adding that “white supremacy” was being promoted, though the public reporting available does not show him offering a detailed explanation for that claim in the same set of remarks. His comments came against the backdrop of growing outrage over the January 2026 fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti during federal immigration operations in Minneapolis, both of which drew broad scrutiny and helped turn the city into a flashpoint in the national immigration debate.
The broader controversy is rooted not only in rhetoric but in the events that prompted it. Reuters reported that a federal immigration agent fatally shot Good, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen, during an enforcement surge in Minneapolis on January 7, 2026, and that federal agents later fatally shot Alex Pretti, another U.S. citizen, on January 24, 2026, sparking protests and calls for investigations. Those incidents, along with disputes over official accounts and video evidence, intensified criticism from state and local leaders who argued that federal enforcement had become destabilizing and dangerous.
As the fallout continues, Newsom’s remarks have come to symbolize a wider political battle over the language, limits, and consequences of immigration enforcement under Trump. Supporters of the administration argue that federal officers are carrying out immigration law, while critics say the methods and messaging surrounding the operations have deepened fear, mistrust, and civic unrest. In that sense, the dispute is no longer just about one statement or one city, but about how far political leaders are willing to go in framing immigration policy as either law enforcement, provocation, or something in between.