
California Governor Gavin Newsom’s decision to negotiate an independent clean energy deal with the United Kingdom has ignited a constitutional firestorm, with President Trump denouncing the agreement as a blatant example of a state governor undermining federal authority on foreign policy.
Story Snapshot
- Trump called Newsom a “loser” and labeled California’s UK clean energy deal “inappropriate” after it was signed February 16, 2026
- Newsom signed offshore wind cooperation agreement with UK Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, bypassing federal government in foreign diplomacy
- The California governor called Trump “temporary” at Munich Security Conference days earlier, positioning himself as a stable international partner
- This constitutional clash reveals Newsom’s 2028 presidential ambitions while highlighting dangerous precedent of state-level foreign policy
Newsom Circumvents Federal Authority With Foreign Deal
President Trump swiftly condemned California’s February 16, 2026 clean energy agreement with the United Kingdom, calling it “inappropriate” during a Politico interview. The deal, signed by Governor Newsom and UK Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, focuses on offshore wind cooperation and market access for British firms in California. Trump labeled Newsom a “loser” and criticized California’s environmental policies as disasters that have ruined the state. This represents a troubling expansion of state power into foreign policy, an area constitutionally reserved for the federal government.
Governor’s International Campaign Reveals Presidential Ambitions
Newsom’s UK deal follows a pattern of international grandstanding that began at the Munich Security Conference on February 14, 2026, where he called Trump “temporary” and predicted the president would be “gone in three years.” The California governor positioned his state as a “stable partner” for European allies during what he characterized as federal “instability.” This globe-trotting continues earlier trips to Davos (where he was blocked from US venues, allegedly by the White House) and a UN climate summit in Belém. These actions clearly signal Newsom’s 2028 presidential campaign strategy, using taxpayer resources to build his international profile.
Trump Administration Restores Energy Independence And Deregulation
The clash occurs as President Trump advances his administration’s pro-American energy agenda, including repealing the 2009 EPA “endangerment finding” that falsely classified greenhouse gases as threats. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin hailed this as the “largest deregulation ever,” freeing American industry from crushing regulatory overreach. Trump has also invited oil and gas nominations for California offshore leases and withdrawn from the Paris Agreement, reversing Biden-era globalist policies. These actions prioritize American jobs, energy independence, and consumer choice over radical environmental ideology that benefits China’s dominance in renewable markets.
California’s Overreach Threatens Constitutional Balance
Newsom’s office responded to Trump’s criticism by claiming the president favors “coal, Big Oil, and China,” a baseless attack that ignores how California’s extreme regulations actually cede economic ground to Chinese manufacturers. The governor leverages California’s status as the world’s fourth-largest economy to conduct what amounts to independent diplomacy, directly challenging federal supremacy in foreign affairs. This dangerous precedent undermines constitutional order, where states have no authority to negotiate international agreements. Newsom co-chairs the US Climate Alliance and “America Is All In” coalitions, organizations that deliberately bypass federal policy to impose California’s radical agenda nationally.
Trump Slams Newsom’s U.K. Climate Deal as ‘Inappropriate’https://t.co/ul914E0Cdg
— RedState (@RedState) February 16, 2026
The confrontation exposes fundamental differences between Trump’s America First energy policy and Newsom’s globalist climate extremism. While Trump works to restore American manufacturing competitiveness through deregulation, Newsom’s international deals threaten to lock California into agreements that harm consumers with higher energy costs and destroy jobs. His 2035 gas car ban and strict emissions standards, enabled by decades-old EPA authority meant only to address smog, now serve as weapons against American automakers. This constitutional crisis demands clarity: foreign policy belongs to the president, not to governors with presidential ambitions seeking international acclaim at America’s expense.
Sources:
Q&A: What does Trump’s repeal of US ‘endangerment finding’ mean for climate action?
Newsom tells world leaders Trump’s retreat on environment will mean economic harm
Newsom at Munich Security Conference discusses Trump, Ukraine deal













