Gavin Newsom’s California Faces $160 Million Federal Funding Cut and CDL License Halt Over Undocumented Driver Policies
In a blistering escalation of the Trump administration’s crackdown on sanctuary state policies, California stands on the brink of losing $160 million in federal highway funding and its authority to issue Commercial Driver’s Licenses (CDLs) due to alleged violations in licensing undocumented immigrants. The move, announced by U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on October 23, 2025, targets the Golden State’s progressive immigration stance, which allows non-citizens to obtain driver’s licenses under Assembly Bill 60 (AB 60). Citing “egregious noncompliance” uncovered in recent audits, the Department of Transportation (DOT) accuses California of issuing thousands of invalid CDLs to foreign nationals without proper immigration verification, endangering public safety. In a fiery response, Governor Gavin Newsom lambasted the decision as “a politically motivated vendetta designed to punish families and cripple our economy,” vowing to fight it in court and rally Democratic allies nationwide.

The controversy traces back to a deadly August 12, 2025, crash on Florida’s Turnpike, where an undocumented truck driver—licensed in California—fatally struck a minivan, killing three people during an illegal U-turn. The driver, identified as undocumented immigrant Rajdeep Singh, had obtained a limited-term CDL in 2024 despite federal mandates requiring proof of legal status. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier seized on the tragedy, urging the DOT to strip California and Washington of CDL programs and funding. DOT audits, detailed in a September 29 Federal Register interim final rule, revealed that 25% of non-domiciled CDLs reviewed in California from June 2025 violated federal rules under 49 CFR Part 383, which demands SAVE system checks for immigration status. “California’s reckless disregard is frankly disgusting,” Duffy declared in a Washington press conference. “They’ve issued licenses to ineligible drivers, some valid years beyond their lawful presence, putting Americans at risk.”
The proposed penalties are severe: revocation of California’s CDL issuance authority—shifting it to federal oversight—and clawback of $160 million from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program, which funds highway safety initiatives. This marks the seventh such action against states this year, following probes in Texas, Illinois, and Colorado. Critics, including the American Trucking Associations, argue the policy chaos has flooded roads with unqualified operators; FMCSA data links five fatal accidents since January 2025 to improperly licensed immigrant drivers, claiming 12 lives. In California, over 1 million undocumented residents hold AB 60 licenses—initially non-commercial but expanded via 2022 laws—fueling GOP outrage. Trump himself amplified the announcement on Truth Social: “Newsom’s woke disaster turns California roads into death traps. Time to end the madness!”
Newsom’s reaction was swift and unyielding, erupting during a Sacramento rally on October 24, where he addressed a crowd of 5,000 immigrant rights advocates waving “Resist the Raid” signs. “This isn’t about safety—it’s about bigotry,” the governor thundered, his voice rising over cheers. “Donald Trump and his cronies are weaponizing tragedy to terrorize hardworking families who just want to drive to work without fear. We’ll sue their asses from here to the Supreme Court!” Flanked by Latino leaders and union reps, Newsom signed an emergency executive order directing the DMV to accelerate compliance reviews while challenging the funding cut under the Administrative Procedure Act. “California won’t bow to bullies,” he added, pledging $50 million in state funds to bridge any gaps. His office fired off a blistering letter to Duffy, accusing the DOT of “selective enforcement” and ignoring similar lapses in red states.
The backlash has cleaved national discourse. Conservative firebrands like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hailed it as “justice for victims,” tweeting a graphic of the Florida crash with the caption: “Newsom’s blood on his hands.” On X, #ShutDownCA CDL trended with 1.2 million posts, including memes of Newsom as a “license bandit.” Progressive outlets decried it as xenophobic overreach; the ACLU announced lawsuits alleging racial profiling, while California’s Latino Caucus mobilized for a federal injunction. Economically, the stakes are dire: trucking employs 500,000 in the state, and a CDL freeze could snarl supply chains from ports to farms, costing billions in delays.
Newsom’s defiance echoes his broader war with Trump, from immigration raids to wildfire aid disputes. Polling from UC Berkeley shows 62% of Californians oppose the cuts, viewing them as federal overreach, but 45% worry about road safety. As legal battles loom—potentially reaching the Supreme Court by 2026—this clash underscores America’s fractured immigration fault lines. For Newsom, eyed as a 2028 presidential frontrunner, it’s a high-wire act: rallying his base while shielding the economy. “We’re not just fighting for licenses,” he told CNN. “We’re fighting for the soul of a nation that welcomes dreamers, not demonizes them.”
Yet, whispers in Sacramento suggest cracks: DMV insiders admit procedural glitches in verifying EAD cards, and some Democrats urge quiet reforms to avoid escalation. Florida’s interdiction stations, now bolstered by 287(g) certifications, symbolize the red-state pushback, with FDACS officers screening drivers for English proficiency and status. As the October 25 deadline for compliance nears, California’s ports hum with tension—trucks idling, families bracing. Newsom’s strong stand may galvanize resistance, but at what cost? In Trump’s America, sanctuary dreams collide with border walls, and every mile driven becomes a battleground.
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