Friday November 22, 2024

Trump picks Rubio as secretary of state during his 2nd presidential term

Published : 14 Nov 2024, 03:12

  DF News Desk
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio. File Photo: Xinhua.

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump announced Wednesday that Marco Rubio, Republican U.S. senator from the state of Florida, will be the secretary of state during his second presidential term, reported Xinhua.

"It is my Great Honor to announce that Senator Marco Rubio, of Florida, is hereby nominated to be The United States Secretary of State," Trump said in a statement, adding that the 53-year-old Cuban American "is a Highly Respected Leader, and a very powerful Voice for Freedom."

Rubio, whose nomination has been reported by U.S. media outlets for days, reacted quickly to Trump's formal announcement, saying on X that he was "honored by the trust President Trump has placed in me" to bear the "tremendous responsibility" of leading the Department of State.

"As Secretary of State, I will work every day to carry out his foreign policy agenda," he added.

The secretary of state, as is the case for other cabinet members of the presidential administration, will have to be approved by the Senate before assuming office.

"I look forward to earning the support of my colleagues in the U.S. Senate so the President has his national security and foreign policy team in place when he takes office on January 20," said Rubio, who was elected into the Senate in 2010. He was re-elected in 2022 to serve another six-year term.

Rubio ran an unsuccessful presidential campaign in the 2016 election, which saw Trump won his first presidential term.

Now that Rubio will soon be leaving the Capitol Hill, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is tasked with selecting a replacement for Rubio to serve two of the remaining four years of the senator's term, until a special election in 2026 to decide who would fill the seat for the last two years.

Many names have been speculated for the position, among them Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump, who is now the co-chair of the Republican National Committee.

Trump was rumored to have been pressing on DeSantis, a presidential candidate vying for nomination against Trump in the 2024 GOP primary, to select his daughter-in-law.

In one scenario, DeSantis, whose potential second run for president is not out of the question, may name his chief of staff, James Uthmeier, to be a placeholder for him in the Senate until his gubernatorial term ends in 2026, at which point DeSantis could run for the seat himself and, if successful, use it as a launching pad for the White House.