President Donald Trump announced a surprise soft landing for Mike Waltz hours after news broke that Waltz he was being forced out as national security advisor.
Waltz, who had a key role in the ‘Signalgate’ scandal after adding an editor to a group chat about a military strike on the Houthis, is Trump’s new pick to be ambassador to the United Nations.
The president revealed the news on Truth Social after wrapping up a National Day of Prayer event.
Unlike the national security job – which Waltz held as of Thursday morning while giving a TV appearance – the UN post requires Senate confirmation.
Republicans could push the nomination through on a simple majority, although Waltz earned some supportive language from Democrats Thursday who weren’t expecting his ouster.
Trump’s firing of Waltz is the first ousting of a cabinet secretary in this administration, the Daily Mail confirmed.
Rubio, who spoke forcefully at Wednesday’s cabinet meeting while refusing to reveal if there are talks to bring back a man mistakenly deported to Venezuela, will take on the security advisor role on a temporary basis.
He is becoming Trump’s Mr. Fix It, also serving as acting administrator as U.S.A.I.D. after the administration dismantled the agency. When Trump fired the national archivist, he made Rubio Acting Archivist of the National Archives and Records Administration.
It comes weeks after Waltz unwittingly added a journalist to a highly sensitive group chat on the Signal app detailing bomb strike plans against Houthis in Yemen.
The mistake quickly devolved into the biggest scandal of Trump’s second term so far and left the president grappling with negative press fallout.
A source told the Daily Mail that Waltz’s departure is expected and Trump will likely announce it very soon.
Speculation mounted that he could be replaced by Trump’s current special envoy Steve Witkoff, who has held several meetings with Vladimir Putin.
Journalist Mark Halperin first reported on his 2Way YouTube show that there was ‘unhappiness throughout the national security establishment’ with Waltz and his deputy national security adviser Alex Wong due to the Signal breach of security.
‘This has to do about competence, not ideology,’ he said.
Halperin specified that the timing was uncertain, noting that the president had not settled on a replacement.
‘I do believe he has made up his mind, but he could change his mind,’ he said.

National Security Adviser Michael Waltz looks at his phone as he prepares for a TV interview at the White House on Thursday immediately before his firing

US National Security Adviser Michael Waltz at the White House

Waltz participated in a Cabinet meeting hosted by Trump on Wednesday, one day before his ouster
A spokesperson for the White House National Security Council did not respond to a Daily Mail request for comment.
Waltz appeared in an interview on Fox and Friends Thursday morning, giving no indication that he was about to lose his job.
He trumpeted the completion of a rare minerals deal with Ukraine as ‘good for the American taxpayer’ and ‘good for Ukraine’ to help it grow their economic development and security.
Waltz also participated in a Cabinet meeting hosted by Trump on Wednesday.
He had kept his job despite the ‘Signalgate’ scandal in March.
Waltz was responsible for mistakenly adding Atlantic editor Jeffery Goldberg to a Signal chat with 17 high-ranking officials about military strikes in Yemen.
Goldberg published the digital messages in full at The Atlantic, leading to weeks of negative news coverage of the administration and calling into question Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth‘s leadership.

U.S. National Security Adviser Michael Waltz (L) listens during a Cabinet meeting at the White House

National Security Adviser Mike Waltz speaks during a television interview at the White House,
Trump did not fire Waltz at the time, partially because he did not want to give Goldberg the satisfaction.
But Waltz suffered public humiliation from the scandal especially after his embarrassing Fox News interview in which he tried to to explain the mistake.
It also damaged his reputation in the West Wing.
Waltz took responsibility for the mistake, but struggled to explain how Goldberg’s number was in his phone to begin with, even as he stressed that he had never spoken to him before.
‘Well, if you have somebody else’s contact and then it, and then somehow it gets sucked in,’ he said to Fox News host Laura Ingraham.
Trump gave Waltz a less than enthusiastic endorsement in an interview with The Atlantic last week.
‘Waltz is fine. I mean, he’s here. He just left this office,’ Trump said. ‘He’s fine. He was beat up also.’
Waltz’s ouster takes place after journalist and Trump loyalist Laura Loomer met with the president in early April to share information she had about members on his national security council staff.
Several people were fired from the National Security council after the president’s meeting with Loomer, but Trump said his decision was not a result of her reporting.
‘Laura Loomer is a great patriot. She’s a very strong person,’ Trump said. ‘She’s been in the party a long time, she’s done a good job,’ he later added.
Loomer revealed to journalist Tara Palmeri that she wanted to play an old video for the president of Waltz trashing Trump when he first ran for president.
‘It’s something I personally can’t stomach,’ Waltz said in the video, urging viewers to ‘stop Trump now.’