President-elect Donald Trump is expected to nominate Florida Sen. Marco Rubio to serve as secretary of state, according to a source familiar with the selection. If confirmed, Rubio would become the first Latino to ever serve as the nation’s top diplomat.
The selection officially brings Rubio into Trump’s fold and offers a new chapter in the evolving relationship between the two one-time rivals for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. In the years since, Rubio has become a close adviser to Trump on foreign relations, and even was a top contender for vice president up until the day Trump announced Ohio Sen. JD Vance as his running mate.
The nomination is a signal that the Trump administration could be keen on tackling foreign policy with Rubio’s traditional hawkishness — an approach that has made him one of the Senate’s leading voices on international affairs. But the two have disagreed in the past over the extent to which the U.S. should exercise aggressive foreign policy measures.
Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants, was first elected senator for Florida in 2010 after serving in the state house — including as speaker — for more than a decade. During his time in the Senate, Rubio became a key voice in debates over U.S. foreign policy. As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Rubio advocated for Libyan intervention in 2011, and criticized then-President Trump in 2019 for proposing to withdraw from Syria and Afghanistan.