Trump
Expected to Name Marco Rubio as Secretary of State
The
president-elect appears to have settled on the Florida senator, who has taken
hard-line positions on China, Iran and Venezuela, to be the nation’s top
diplomat.
Maggie
HabermanJonathan SwanEdward Wong
By Maggie
HabermanJonathan Swan and Edward Wong
Nov. 11,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/11/us/politics/trump-rubio-secretary-of-state.html
President-elect
Donald J. Trump is expected to name Senator Marco Rubio of Florida as his
secretary of state, three people familiar with his thinking said on Monday, as
Mr. Trump moves rapidly to fill out his foreign policy and national security
team.
Mr. Trump
could still change his mind at the last minute, the people said, but appeared
to have settled on Mr. Rubio, whom he also considered when choosing his running
mate this year.
Mr. Rubio
was elected to the Senate in 2010, and has staked out a position as a foreign
policy hawk, taking hard lines on China, Iran, Venezuela and Cuba in
particular.
He initially
found himself at odds with those Republicans who were more skeptical about
interventions abroad, but he has also echoed Mr. Trump more recently on issues
like Russia’s war against Ukraine, saying that the conflict has reached a
stalemate and “needs to be brought to a conclusion.”
Despite
speaking in hard-line terms about Russia in the past, Mr. Rubio would likely go
along with Mr. Trump’s expected plans to press Ukraine to find a way to come to
a settlement with Russia and remain outside of NATO. It is unclear whether the
leaders of Ukraine or Russia would be prepared to enter into talks at Mr.
Trump’s urging.
Mr. Rubio
has been among the most outspoken senators on the need for the United States to
be more aggressive on China. He has adopted positions that later became more
mainstream in both parties. For example, while serving in Congress during the
first Trump administration, he began advocating industrial policy meant to help
the United States better compete with China’s state-directed economy.
Mr. Rubio
also served as a co-chairman of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive
Commission on China, which has aimed to craft aggressive policy on China,
especially in trying to address human rights abuses there. In 2020, Mr. Rubio
sponsored a bill that tried to prevent the import of Chinese goods made with
the use of forced labor by China’s ethnic Uyghur minority. President Biden
signed it into law the next year.
In 2019, Mr.
Rubio helped persuade Mr. Trump to adopt a harsh sanctions policy against
Venezuela to try to unseat its authoritarian leftist president, Nicolás Maduro.
“He’s picked a battle he can’t win,” Mr. Rubio said of Mr. Maduro in an
interview with The New York Times. “It’s just a matter of time. The only thing
we don’t know is how long it will take — and whether it will be peaceful or
bloody.”
Though
Venezuelans have suffered from the U.S.-imposed sanctions, Mr. Maduro remains
in power.
More
recently, Mr. Rubio has expressed unalloyed American support for Israel’s war
in Gaza. When asked by a peace activist late last year what he thought about
the many Palestinian civilian deaths, he said, “I think Hamas is 100 percent to
blame.”
Mr. Rubio
has worked across party lines on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the
Senate Intelligence Committee, and would likely sail through a confirmation
process.
If he
becomes secretary of state, a main question is whether he would forgo U.S.
interventions in parts of the world to prioritize China. That approach would
align with Mr. Trump’s “America First” ideas but would run counter to some of
Mr. Rubio’s earlier positions.
Mr. Rubio
was a loyal surrogate for Mr. Trump during the campaign even after being passed
over as the vice-presidential pick.
A spokesman
for Mr. Rubio declined to comment, and a spokesman for Mr. Trump did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Mr. Trump
has made his choice for a number of other national security roles. He has
selected Representative Michael Waltz, Republican of Florida, to be his
national security adviser, and Representative Elise Stefanik, Republican of New
York, to be ambassador to the United Nations.
Mr. Rubio
was first elected to the Senate in 2010 as part of a new generation of
conservative Tea Party leaders. But some conservatives considered him wobbly on
immigration, an issue that caused him political problems when he ran for the
Republican presidential nomination in 2016 against Mr. Trump and others.
During that
campaign, Mr. Trump belittled him as “Little Marco,” and Mr. Rubio responded
with acerbic attacks.
But after
Mr. Trump’s 2016 victory, Mr. Rubio went on to patch things up with him,
serving as an informal foreign policy adviser and helping to prepare him for
his first debate against Mr. Biden in 2020.
Under
Florida law, Gov. Ron DeSantis can temporarily appoint a replacement to Mr.
Rubio’s seat who will serve in the Senate until the next regularly scheduled
general election is held. After last week’s elections, Republicans are set to
hold at least 52 seats in the chamber.
Catie
Edmondson contributed reporting.
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent reporting on the 2024 presidential
campaign, down ballot races across the country and the investigations into
former President Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter covering the 2024 presidential election and Donald
Trump’s campaign. More about Jonathan Swan
Edward Wong
reports on global affairs, U.S. foreign policy and the State Department. More
about Edward Wong
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