February 24, 2026
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Newsom Allocates $35 Million to Aid Undocumented Immigrants During Trump Mass‑Deportation Push

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has ordered the release of $35 million in state funds that lawmakers earmarked to support undocumented immigrants as the Trump administration ramps up a mass‑deportation agenda bankrolled with roughly $170 billion in federal enforcement money. The money will flow through philanthropic and community partners to provide food assistance and other basic needs for immigrant families and comes on top of existing state funding for deportation‑defense legal services, even as Sacramento faces an anticipated $2.9 billion budget deficit and has already pared back some health coverage for undocumented residents. Newsom and California Health and Human Services Secretary Kim Johnson frame the move as a moral obligation to 'show up for families' amid heightened fears of arrests, with immigrant advocates saying people are afraid to leave home, go to school or work, or buy groceries. Democratic leaders such as state Sen. Lena Gonzalez cast the funding as defiance of a Trump administration 'war on our communities,' while Republican Assemblymember Carl DeMaio calls it 'absurd' to devote scarce state dollars to assist people in the country illegally. The allocation underscores a widening federal‑state confrontation over immigration enforcement, with California using its own treasury to blunt the impact of Washington’s policies at the very moment the White House is trying to financially punish sanctuary jurisdictions.

Immigration & Demographic Change California State Policy

📌 Key Facts

  • Gov. Gavin Newsom is releasing $35 million in California state funds to support undocumented immigrants during the Trump administration’s mass‑deportation campaign.
  • The money, set aside in the state budget, will go through philanthropic partners to provide food aid and other basic resources, supplementing separate state‑funded legal services for people facing deportation.
  • California is making this allocation while projecting a $2.9 billion budget deficit and after limiting some health‑care benefits for undocumented immigrants last year.
  • Newsom’s office cites a June Trump‑signed budget bill that steers about $170 billion into immigration enforcement, detention and deportation, with a stated goal of removing up to 1 million immigrants per year over four years.
  • Democrats in Sacramento praise the move as standing with immigrant families, while at least one Republican lawmaker publicly criticizes using taxpayer money to aid people in the country illegally.

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