Rubio-x cube
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POgeKtaXr5jdkspZpk1htVRwD7flow4nw__d8cWihDH8kGFrb1euNW42wCs09cGZ6EFN6m3D_WUfbHiyBdz_xQ4d8h-PWcrK4qC91VV7VrJb3ZG-5b_ymZ3D8gTfiCiq2qhEuZ0J3uGltDd-QjjDBShtlTn8U9POK2vPdHt0IHCJBTIAEQ-1Z2hunJH6-5gPuYMjeUt3VJZIbVnd0aLvXcoG54CEhIZ0ETrxOLwrxaeXXbhgUQarOj5MdFvo7mwHA_Q==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>
The signs, from an establishment perspective, were good: Republican Sen.
Marco Rubio was a safe, stable choice to lead the State Department
<https://t.devex.com/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9a_WiNqR8Gi5JW2zKp8MkWLT3vPL1ld62KwPzJy5zzb4EIFnacA-XzAWUzipHo-VWEQ=>.
Unlike some of U.S. President Donald Trump’s other Cabinet picks, Rubio was
a known quantity. He was so known, in fact, that his nomination sailed
through the Senate
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POgeKtaXr5jdkspZpk1htVRx3RQKdJ6ABCbYYdm4ZsU5WJ_Beem_45hL00ctmRH17jHxO1Gvce4TutIdb4iPv7_mFoheApFA5SlP-0CtGFqziXIo8ScbFab4pFtTRzFw92CxhEdl0xexdezWxTpeyH8X78pT7COOo6Yzphf2WaJ3RJtRmtothChsAc1ZhSUcM_2Ebr1WlyGhC01GSOZS-SGA2Px3N-WLrHA8FCrb81fNvrpUT7aQglrVfP--S-sY8iA==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>
by
a vote of 99-0.

Then, he became virtually unrecognizable to the aid community that once saw
him as a fairly dependable ally
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POqbGBFcIVugQyV9h9ER72ry7Yus0api368IVpfbLGQXHqkhBQLkNUguHjI_M0VIJW924hU-0ZOKhyAXYaKedV4zZTQHOOuy8dkgl-f1ThmThv4xx9Ins9CZQu4FGPpBZpaLwdLx-SdAqVZ84o1gBFp2t-W9ybOasira1-H8blXyac0UFQnJM62cGPgSy-Hthm2HLBv7vHp8JHb9UY4XDkEF406HZruBuGjGNe9DkxFz6irQH7j4IY88utSs_zlYj4w==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>
.

*“Rubio threw in the towel on USAID,”* says one recently terminated
humanitarian staffer at the agency. “It’s clear he wasn’t consulted on any
of these decisions being made, and he still seems entirely out of the loop
with neither the personal nor political will to intervene.”

Others take a more nuanced view
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POgeKtaXr5jdkspZpk1htVRwD7flow4nw__d8cWihDH8kGFrb1euNW42wCs09cGZ6EFN6m3D_WUfbHiyBdz_xQ4d8h-PWcrK4qC91VV7VrJb3ZG-5b_ymZ3D8gTfiCiq2qhEuZ0J3uGltDd-QjjDBShtlTn8U9POK2vPdHt0IHCJBTIAEQ-1Z2hunJH6-5gPuYMjeUt3VJZIbVnd0aLvXcoG54CEhIZ0ETrxOLwrxaeXXSR8tEBrklFsYSPeaHhNaEQ==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>,
Christine Ro writes for Devex. “Once you’re secretary of state, you serve
at the pleasure of the president,” says Doug Anderson, former general
counsel of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and now senior director of
U.S. government relations at the ONE Campaign
<https://t.devex.com/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9VSVr02nmBRxpVXXWNhZe5PMWjM_JN48YpMpwc7Sl4TUdPiICNm7OHqGB05NbL_0-zY=>
.

“Some of Secretary Rubio's own stated new emphases are very welcome, for
example, approaching foreign partners as real partners, rather than
presumptuously dictating to them as outsiders what we think their
assistance needs are, is a welcome shift in emphasis,” he adds.

However, Anderson says, the challenge “has been *reconciling Secretary
Rubio's aspirational statements with the fairly disruptive reality* of
what's often happening on the ground.”

And even though the administration has laid out plans for merging USAID
into the State Department
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POjbW6rOsZ37Uc-AtgCDeIvf-tQPk7a-wKqtdlQNd9Bin0p0asLeKcYa1Ku2KZ-obWes9WP-mmvJ70f8Mhab83z3eMixFgX_X-eZw-52dZUDq9rhh97NkG4Xgor54u9eObLadwzf3_QxN8TAgVWpy622piMhuRubdhWCeo0-JaPZD1lzflqAq0OvPHUCOmXA73ZRTMUMeZEqVWwV83FumYY9XwT4b_EjexonhC57dnPP-f3Qv2EFhUmRJUTAXfM7vIw==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>,
it remains to be seen if the disruption will settle down — or *how much
Rubio will take the reins* of the massive transition ahead.

For his part, Rubio has been clear that something needed to change.

“Foreign aid is the least popular thing government spends money on,” Rubio
said during a trip to Guatemala early in his tenure. “I spent a lot of time
in my career defending it and explaining it, but it’s harder and harder to
do across the board — it really is.”

But he added: “The United States is not walking away from foreign aid. It’s
not. We’re going to continue to provide foreign aid and to be involved in
programs, but it has to be programs that we can defend. It has to be
programs that we can explain.”

*Read:* What part is Marco Rubio actually playing in USAID's dismantling?
<https://t.devex.com/dc/kyXVoDpAY__Vu56MNr4POgeKtaXr5jdkspZpk1htVRwD7flow4nw__d8cWihDH8kGFrb1euNW42wCs09cGZ6EFN6m3D_WUfbHiyBdz_xQ4d8h-PWcrK4qC91VV7VrJb3ZG-5b_ymZ3D8gTfiCiq2qhEuZ0J3uGltDd-QjjDBShtlTn8U9POK2vPdHt0IHCJBTIAEQ-1Z2hunJH6-5gPuYMjeUt3VJZIbVnd0aLvXcoG54CEhIZ0ETrxOLwrxaeXX6ioWlROWhKrRjnPhxJjeBA==/Njg1LUtCTC03NjUAAAGZtA5w9R9UPvMSqgV2K0iTzrbnW02arUKHpTEiPHIO8mXJm9txyNLIXAxTT9Pq3dDjLoDBPyw=>

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