Mike Waltz to exit Trump White House weeks after Signal chat fiasco
Cybele Mayes-Osterman and Joey Garrison, USA TODAY
Thu, May 1, 2025
https://www.yahoo.com/news/mike-waltz-exit-trump-administration-145812907.html
WASHINGTON − Mike Waltz, President Donald Trump's national security adviser, is set to leave his
White House post amid continued fallout weeks after he invited a journalist into a chat between
top national security officials discussing plans for Yemen airstrikes.
A source familiar with the situation on May 1
confirmed Waltz' exit, as well as deputy national security adviser Alex Wong.
Their departures mark the first major staff shake-up since Trump's return to
the White House in January.
Trump had publicly stood by Waltz after his national security adviser and
other members of the chat vigorously
denied sharing any classified war plans on the publicly available app Signal.
The chat was revealed when Jeffrey
Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, published a March 24 story detailing how Waltz
accidentally invited him into the communications.
Yet behind-the scenes, the embarrassing mishap ‒ which
even Trump started
referring to as "Signalgate" ‒ took a toll on the relationship between Trump
and Waltz, a former Republican congressman from Florida.
A replacement for Waltz has not been named, but one
possibility could be Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy to the Middle East,
whose role has expanded to also include negotiations between Russia and
Ukraine.
Waltz' departure, just 102 days into Trump's second term, marks the first high-ranking administration official
to leave since the president's inauguration. Yet Waltz lasted longer than
Michael Flynn, Trump's first national security adviser, who Trump in
February 2017 fired 24 days into his first term.
The Waltz move comes after far-right activist Laura Loomer has exerted increasing influence in Trump's
decision-making, including encouraging Trump to recently fire two senior
officials on the
National Security Council after a White House visit.
"Hopefully, the rest of the people who were set
to be fired but were given promotions at the NSC under Waltz also depart,"
Loomer said in a post on X shortly after news broke about Waltz's exit.
Loomer, on a recent podcast hosted by reporter Tara Palmeri, recounted her recent Oval Office visit with Trump,
saying she was prepared to show the president past footage from his 2016
campaign of Waltz criticizing him for remarks he made about U.S. service
members.
"I was about to show this video of Michael Waltz,
and then President Trump walked into the Oval Office," Loomer said, adding
that she's kept in on her phone for "many years."
Just hours before news of his departure, Waltz
appeared on Fox News, touting "leadership at its finest, led by our
commander-in-chief" as he discussed new military technology investments.
With Waltz out, three original Trump picks for top
posts who had been serving as Republican lawmakers in the U.S. House are now
either gone or ‒ in the case of Matt Gaetz, Trump's initial nominee to lead the
Justice Department, and Elise Stefanik, his onetime selection for U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations ‒ never made it.
On the day of the initial Atlantic report revealing
the Signal chat, Waltz said he took "full
responsibility" for
the "embarrassing" blunder. "We're going to get to the bottom of
it," he told Laura Ingraham on Fox News.
Waltz mistakenly added Goldberg, a longtime national
security journalist, to a chat on the encrypted messaging app Signal in
mid-March that also included Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and Vice President JD Vance, among other members of
the Trump administration's top echelon.
Officials in the group discussed military plans to strike the Houthi
militant movement in
Yemen, and Hegseth sent a message detailing strike times by U.S. warplanes and
drones – as Goldberg reported in the bombshell article.
Trump defended Waltz at the start of the controversy,
saying it was a "mistake" and that "he's not getting
fired." But fallout from the incident grew as lawmakers on the House and
Senate intelligence committees grilled
Trump's intelligence officials and following reports of an additional
Signal chat created
by Hegseth in which the Defense secretary shared sensitive military information
with his wife and brother.
As Hegseth repeatedly denied accusations that he had
shared any classified war plans, The Atlantic published screenshots of messages
Hegseth sent in the chat that detailed the exact times of planned strikes and
how they would be delivered.
Waltz was also defiant for weeks before news of his
departure. "No locations. No sources & methods. NO WAR PLANS," he
posted on X in March.
A former member of the Army’s Green Berets, Waltz
served three terms representing the sixth congressional district in North
Central Florida. He was replaced in Congress by Republican Randy Fine,
who won a special election in March.
Waltz initially was elected to the House in 2018,
replacing Ron DeSantis after his rise to Florida governor. An officer in the
Army National Guard, Waltz had served in combat zones multiple times. He had
been a defense policy director in the Pentagon before being tapped by Vice
President Dick Cheney as a counterterrorism adviser during the George W. Bush
administration. Waltz retired from the Army Reserve last fall at the rank
of colonel.
Dinah Pulver contributed to this report.
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