In a widely discussed interview with political podcast host Shawn Ryan, California Governor Gavin Newsom appeared to struggle responding to a question about whether states could remove children from families who refuse gender‑affirming care, delivering a rambling, confusing answer that has drawn criticism.
Asked directly, Ryan posed, “The state can come in and basically take your kid if you’re against gender‑affirming care.” Newsom paused, then replied: “There’s some… it’s a… yeah, there’s some nuance language and, and yeah…” before trailing off.
Critics say his tone and hesitation—plus his repeated use of filler words like “some” and “nuance”—failed to clarify whether such action would be legally permissible or ethical. Conservative commentators jumped on the remarks to accuse Newsom of being evasive or out of touch on a polarizing issue.
But the confusion didn’t stop there. Newsom also shared an off-topic anecdote about using the term “LatinX” in the office and being challenged by his chief of staff, who is Hispanic. “I remember walking into my staff.
I started using the word LatinX a few times. And then my chief of staff… goes, ‘Would you shut up?’ I’m like, ‘What?’ She goes, ‘Who uses that word?’ I said, ‘I don’t know.’”
That story, shared mid-interview, struck many as odd and unhelpfully deflective—viewers praised it for self-deprecation, while others saw it as distractingly off-message.
Democratic allies rallied to defend Newsom, pointing to his pro‑trans policies and deep legal protections like SB 107, which shields California families and doctors from out-of-state gender-care penalties. Sacramento progressives argue that the governor remains a strong ally of LGBTQ+ rights despite occasional verbal missteps.
Still, political opponents wasted no time. Many on the right seized the awkward exchange to accuse Newsom of seeking national attention and failing to lead decisively on critical issues.
With his possible presidential ambitions on the line, Newsom faces growing pressure to deliver clear messaging during media appearances. Senior aides believe that despite the stumble, this incident doesn’t undermine his record—but they acknowledge the need for tighter discipline in high-stakes interviews.

