Key Points

The US State Department has announced a major reorganization under Secretary Marco Rubio to align with President Trump's America First policy. Spokesperson Tammy Bruce emphasized the need to cut bureaucratic bloat and refocus on core diplomatic missions. The plan includes consolidating regional functions and eliminating redundant programs. The reforms aim to make the department more efficient and responsive to global challenges.

Key Points: Trump and Rubio Announce State Department Reorganization Plan

  • Marco Rubio leads State Department overhaul to cut bureaucracy
  • Plan consolidates functions and removes redundant offices
  • Reforms align with Trump's America First foreign policy
  • Changes aim to boost efficiency in global diplomacy
2 min read

Must make State Department Great Again: US announces reorganisation of State Department

US State Department unveils sweeping reforms under Trump's America First policy, aiming to streamline bureaucracy and refocus diplomacy.

"We must make the State Department Great Again – Tammy Bruce"

Washington, DC, April 22

The US State Department has unveiled a reorganisation plan to implement President Trump's America First foreign policy. During a State Department press briefing, spokesperson Tammy Bruce shared the details of the sweeping changes aimed at revitalising the Department.

Speaking to the media, Bruce said that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced a reorganisation plan to build an "America first state department to meet the challenges of a new era".

Tammy Bruce said that the sweeping changes would empower the diplomats to put America and Americans first.

In her statement, she said, "We are facing tremendous challenges across the globe. To deliver on President Trump's America First foreign policy, we must make the State Department Great Again".

"In its current form, the Department is bloated, bureaucratic, and unable to perform its essential diplomatic mission in this new era of great power competition. Over the past 15 years, the Department's footprint has had unprecedented growth and costs have soared. But far from seeing a return on investment, taxpayers have seen less effective and efficient diplomacy. The sprawling bureaucracy created a system more beholden to radical political ideology than advancing America's core national interests", she added.

She noted that this is why Marco Rubio has announced a comprehensive reorganisation plan that will bring the Department into the 21st Century. "This approach will empower the Department from the ground up, from the bureaus to the embassies. Region-specific functions will be consolidated to increase functionality, redundant offices will be removed, and non-statutory programs that are misaligned with America's core national interests will cease to exist."

"Under President Trump's leadership, we have a commander in chief committed to putting America and Americans first".

On being asked how ground realities will be shaped across the world, Tammy Bruce said, "This is an organisational roadmap for this department, right here in Washington, DC. The reorg will not affect them (American embassies and consulates) except more direct involvement".

She noted that this will lead to the State Department's return to its "traditional base, to the nature of human diplomacy, to getting things done".

- ANI

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Reader Comments

J
James K.
About time someone streamlined the State Department! The bureaucracy has been out of control for years. Excited to see more efficient diplomacy that actually serves American interests. 🇺🇸
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Sarah L.
I have mixed feelings about this. While efficiency is important, I hope this doesn't mean cutting essential programs that help vulnerable populations abroad. Diplomacy isn't just about power - it's about relationships too.
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Miguel R.
As someone who worked at State for 10 years, I can confirm the bureaucracy is insane. But I worry about what "non-statutory programs misaligned with America's interests" actually means in practice. Will climate initiatives get axed?
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Tina W.
Love the focus on putting Americans first! Our diplomats should be focused on our needs, not political ideologies. Hope this leads to real change and isn't just another reshuffling of deck chairs.
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David P.
The State Dept definitely needs reform, but I'm skeptical about the "America First" framing. In a globalized world, our interests are interconnected with other nations'. Hope this reorganization doesn't mean pulling back from important international cooperation.

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