CELEBRITY
The internet erupted after Ivanka T.r.um.p called Gavin Newsom “ghetto trash” in a now-deleted post — but she didn’t expect what came next. Minutes later, Newsom fired back with a six-word reply so sharp it stopped the internet cold. It wasn’t just a clapback — it was a statement that showed how fast arrogance crumbles in the face of authenticity.
The internet erupted after Ivanka T.r.um.p called Gavin Newsom “ghetto trash” in a now-deleted post — but she didn’t expect what came next. Minutes later, Newsom fired back with a six-word reply so sharp it stopped the internet cold. It wasn’t just a clapback — it was a statement that showed how fast arrogance crumbles in the face of authenticity.
## **Internet Meltdown After Ivanka Trump’s “Ghetto Trash” Jab — And Newsom’s Six-Word Reply That Shut Everything Down**
In what became the internet’s shortest-lived scandal, Ivanka Trump set social media on fire Tuesday afternoon after posting — then rapidly deleting — a comment calling California Governor Gavin Newsom “ghetto trash.”
The post lasted **all of three minutes**, but that was more than enough time for screenshots to detonate across the timeline.
Commentators braced for a long, messy back-and-forth. They didn’t get one.
Instead, Newsom fired back with a **six-word reply** that brought the internet to a standstill:
**“Class isn’t something money can buy.”**
Within seconds, the phrase was trending worldwide. Memes erupted. Edits appeared. Entire think-pieces were drafted before editors could even finish their coffees.
While Ivanka’s post evaporated into the digital abyss, Newsom’s response became a rallying cry — not so much for politics, but for the universal satisfaction of watching a clapback delivered with surgical precision.
By evening, users were declaring it the “most polite obliteration of 2025,” while others marveled at the speed with which arrogance can collapse when met with unpolished authenticity.
Whether the exchange will have any lasting impact is up for debate. But one thing is certain:
**The internet never misses a moment — especially when the drama lasts under five minutes.**
