In the ever-escalating world of American political theater, few moments capture the raw, unfiltered chaos quite like a public spat between former President Donald Trump and California Governor Gavin Newsom. On December 10, 2025, what started as a seemingly innocuous rally quip from Trump in Florida spiraled into a viral online showdown, complete with resurfaced photos, biting nicknames, and a barrage of social media fire that left Trump on the defensive. At the center of it all? A bizarre claim about needing a “185 IQ” to operate a modern lawn mower—a line that Trump intended as a dig at overregulation but instead gifted Newsom the ammunition for a masterful counterpunch. As Democrats gear up for the 2026 midterms and Trump eyes a potential 2028 comeback, this exchange underscores the high-stakes pettiness that’s become the hallmark of U.S. politics.

The incident unfolded during Trump’s address at a “Make America Great Again” event in Miami, where he railed against what he called the “deep state bureaucracy” strangling everyday American life. Midway through his trademark stream-of-consciousness monologue, Trump veered into a tangent about home maintenance, lamenting how federal safety standards have allegedly turned simple chores into engineering feats. “Folks, you know what? Back in the day, you could start a lawn mower with a pull cord and a prayer. Now? Thanks to these radical left regulations, you need a 185 IQ just to get the thing humming without setting off some EPA alarm,” Trump quipped, drawing chuckles from the crowd of several thousand supporters clad in red hats. He punctuated the line with a flourish, waving an imaginary starter cord as if wrestling an invisible beast, before pivoting to broader attacks on environmental policies under the Biden-Harris administration.
To Trump loyalists, it was classic bravado—a folksy jab at “woke” overreach that plays well in Rust Belt swing states. But the remark quickly ricocheted beyond the rally’s echo chamber. Within hours, clips flooded TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and Instagram, amassing over 5 million views by evening. Late-night hosts like Jimmy Kimmel seized on it immediately, with Kimmel deadpanning during his monologue, “Donald Trump just admitted he can’t start a lawn mower? That’s not a gaffe; that’s a confession. Maybe the real deep state is the one that hid his user manual.” The line’s absurdity—equating basic yard work to genius-level intellect—invited mockery from across the aisle, but it was Newsom who turned it into a full-blown political weapon.
Newsom, never one to miss a viral opportunity, pounced with surgical precision. The Democratic golden boy, fresh off a high-profile tour promoting California’s progressive climate agenda, took to X at 8:47 PM ET. His post featured a grainy, infamous photo from 2018: Trump, then-president, awkwardly gripping a White House lawn mower during a ceremonial “groundskeeping” event meant to symbolize bipartisanship. In the image, Trump’s tie flutters comically as he yanks futilely at the cord, his expression a mix of confusion and mild exertion. Newsom captioned it: “185 IQ to start a lawn mower? Don, you couldn’t even manage a 10-second pull in broad daylight. Maybe stick to golf carts—less horsepower, more hot air. 🌿😂 #LawnMowerGate #RealLeadershipStartsAtHome.” The post exploded, racking up 2.3 million likes, 450,000 retweets, and thousands of quote-tweets within the first hour alone. Memes proliferated: Photoshopped versions showed Trump debating Einstein over mower schematics, or Newsom effortlessly starting one with a single eyebrow raise.
Trump’s response was swift and signature—equal parts fury and flair. By 9:15 PM, he fired back from his Truth Social account: “Gavin Newsom, the failed governor of a state that’s burning and bankrupt, thinks he can lecture ME on lawn mowers? Sad! He couldn’t mow a putting green without crying to his Hollywood pals. Shut up, Gavin the Wimp—go fix your wildfires instead of faking smarts. MAGA!” The “Gavin the Wimp” moniker, a riff on his old “Lyin’ Ted” playbook, aimed to deflate Newsom’s momentum, but it only fueled the fire. Newsom didn’t let it slide; he replied minutes later with a video clip from the rally, overlaid with the 2018 photo and a voiceover quipping, “When your biggest flex is insulting yard tools… but can’t even handle the basics.” The exchange devolved into a thread of escalating barbs, with Trump accusing Newsom of “stealing” the photo (it was public domain) and Newsom retorting that Trump’s “brainpower” was better spent on “reading the manual.”
By morning, #LawnMowerGate trended nationwide, dominating cable news cycles. CNN’s Jake Tapper dissected it as “peak Trump: a policy critique disguised as comedy, undone by personal history.” Fox News’ Sean Hannity spun it defensively, calling Newsom’s response “classless desperation from a socialist lightweight.” Pundits on both sides agreed: the skirmish highlighted deeper fault lines. For Trump, it was a reminder of his vulnerability to visual gotchas—those frozen moments that haunt campaigns like specters. The 2018 photo, originally innocuous, had been dormant until now, a perfect encapsulation of the “unpresidential” critiques that dogged his tenure. Newsom, meanwhile, emerged unscathed, even bolstered. Polling snapshots from the Emerson College survey released December 11 showed a 3-point bump in his national favorability among independents, from 42% to 45%, with younger voters (18-34) citing the exchange as “relatable roasting.”
Contextually, this dust-up arrives at a precarious juncture for both men. Trump, 79 and fresh from a narrow 2024 victory that saw him reclaim the White House amid economic turbulence, is navigating a second term shadowed by legal overhangs and GOP infighting. His administration’s early push to roll back EPA emissions standards—framed as “cutting red tape for real Americans”—makes the lawn mower line a microcosm of that agenda. Yet, the gaffe risks alienating suburban moderates wary of environmental deregulation, especially as wildfires rage in California and the West, linking back to Newsom’s barbs about “fixing your wildfires.”
Newsom, 58 and often floated as a 2028 Democratic frontrunner, used the moment to burnish his image as the cool, quick-witted counter to Trump’s bombast. Governing a state of 39 million, he’s championed aggressive climate action, including a $10 billion green jobs initiative signed into law last month. The exchange plays into his narrative of California as an innovation hub versus Trump’s “failed” vision—subtle jabs at Trump’s past mockery of the state as a “hellhole.” Political analysts like CNN’s Van Jones noted, “Newsom didn’t just clap back; he turned Trump’s ego into a lawn clipping. It’s the kind of viral judo that wins hearts in the meme era.”
But beneath the laughs lies a sharper edge. Critics, including some Democrats, worry such personal feuds distract from substantive issues like inflation (hovering at 3.2% nationally) and border security. Trump’s allies dismissed it as “fake news theater,” with RNC chair Lara Trump tweeting, “While libs meme about mowers, President Trump is mowing down bad policies.” Yet, the incident’s virality—spawning over 10,000 user-generated memes by midday December 11—illustrates how social media has weaponized politics, turning policy into punchlines.
As the dust settles, #LawnMowerGate serves as a harbinger for 2026’s battleground races. Will Trump’s off-the-cuff style continue to energize his base while inviting ridicule? Can Newsom leverage these moments to position himself as the anti-Trump without alienating the center? For now, the governor holds the shears, having neatly trimmed Trump’s narrative. In Washington, where words are weapons, sometimes the sharpest cuts come from the garden shed.