Mike Waltz
Michael George Glen Waltz is an American politician, diplomat, businessman, author, and former Army Special Forces officer who has served as the 32nd United States ambassador to the United Nations since September 2025 in the second Trump Administration. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as the 29th national security advisor from January to May 2025 and was the U.S. representative for Florida's 6th congressional district from 2019 to 2025. He was the first Army Special Forces soldier to be elected to Congress. Waltz received four Bronze Stars while serving in the Special Forces during multiple combat tours in Afghanistan (2001–2021)|Afghanistan], the Middle East, and Africa. He served in the Bush administration as a defense policy director in the Pentagon and as counterterrorism advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney.
In 2018 [United States House of Representatives elections in Florida#District 6|2018], Waltz was elected to the House of Representatives, defeating former ambassador Nancy Soderberg and succeeding Ron DeSantis, who was elected governor of Florida that same year. Waltz was re-elected in 2020 [United States House of Representatives elections in Florida#District 6|2020], 2022, and 2024 with over 60% of the vote in each election. He was chair of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness for the 118th United States Congress. Waltz was considered one of Congress's most hawkish members with regard to China, believing the Chinese Communist Party is in a cold war with the U.S. and the West.
In 2021, Waltz was the first member of Congress to call for a full U.S. boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing over what he described as the CCP's genocide and internment of Chinese Uyghur populations and the enslavement, forced labor, and internment camps of ethnic minorities in China. On November 12, 2024, President-elect Trump announced he would appoint Waltz to serve as national security advisor in his second administration. Waltz resigned his House seat prior to taking office on January 20, 2025.
On May 1, 2025, it was reported that Waltz, along with Deputy National Security Advisor Alex Wong, would leave their posts following group chat leaks on the messaging platform Signal. Waltz served as NSA for 101 days, the second shortest tenure for a non-acting officeholder in the position. The same day, Trump announced via social media that he intended to nominate Waltz to serve as Ambassador to the United Nations and that Marco Rubio would take on an acting role as National Security Advisor.
Early life and education (1974–1996)
Waltz was born on January 31, 1974, to a single mother in Boynton Beach, Florida, and grew up in Jacksonville, where he graduated from Stanton College Preparatory School. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in international studies from the Virginia Military Institute in 1996, graduating with honors as a Distinguished Military Graduate.Military career (1996–2023)
Waltz was commissioned as an armor officer in the U.S. Army in 1996. He later graduated from Ranger School and graduated from the Special Forces selection and training|Special Forces Qualification Course] in 2000, then serving two years as an active duty Special Forces officer with multiple tours in the Middle East and Africa. For his actions in combat, Waltz was decorated with four Bronze Stars, including two for valor.From 2002 to 2011 and 2016 to 2023, Waltz served in Company B, 2nd Battalion, 20th Special Forces, MD-ARNG. From 2012 to 2015, he served in 5th Battalion, 19th Special Forces, TX-ARNG.
Waltz worked in the Pentagon as a defense policy director for secretaries of defense Donald Rumsfeld and Robert Gates. He went on to serve in the White House as the vice president's counterterrorism advisor. Waltz wrote Warrior Diplomat: A Green Beret's Battles from Washington to Afghanistan.
In 2010, Waltz helped found the analytics and training company Metis Solutions. It was bought in November 2020 by Pacific Architects and Engineers for $92 million.
Upon becoming the national security advisor under President Donald Trump, Waltz retired from the Army National Guard at the rank of colonel.
U.S. House of Representatives (2019–2025)
Elections
2018
Waltz ran for Florida's 6th congressional district in 2018 to succeed incumbent Republican Ron DeSantis, who retired before being elected governor of Florida. He defeated John Ward and Fred Costello in the Republican primary before facing Democratic nominee Nancy Soderberg, a former Alternate US Ambassador to the United Nations and the former deputy national security advisor, in the general election. Waltz won with 56.31% of the vote to Soderberg's 43.69%.2020
Waltz was challenged by Democratic nominee Clint Curtis. He received 265,393 votes to Curtis's 172,305.Tenure in Congress
Waltz was sworn in to the 116th United States Congress on January 3, 2019.In April 2020, Waltz joined the National Guard's COVID-19 response efforts as a colonel on the planning staff. On November 6, 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, he tested positive for the virus.
In December 2020, Waltz was one of 126 Republican members of the House of Representatives to sign an amicus brief in support of Texas v. Pennsylvania, a lawsuit filed at the United States Supreme Court contesting the results of the 2020 presidential election, in which Joe Biden defeated incumbent Donald Trump. The Supreme Court declined to hear the case on the basis that Texas lacked standing under Article III of the Constitution to challenge the results of an election held by another state. Shortly thereafter, the Orlando Sentinel editorial board rescinded its endorsement of Waltz in the 2020 election. They wrote, "We had no idea, had no way of knowing at the time, that Waltz was not committed to democracy." Ultimately, Waltz voted to 2021 [United States Electoral College vote count#Joint session of Congress|confirm the electoral victory of Joe Biden].
Along with all other Senate and House Republicans, Waltz voted against the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.
On May 19, 2021, Waltz voted against legislation to establish the formation of a January 6 commission meant to investigate the storming of the U.S. Capitol.
On July 29, 2024, Waltz was announced as one of seven Republican members of a bipartisan task force investigating the attempted assassination of Donald Trump.
Agriculture
In October 2023, Waltz wrote a letter with 15 other House Republicans to the House Committee on Agriculture opposing the inclusion of the Ending Agricultural Trade Suppression Act in the 2023 farm bill. The EATS Act would have preempted state and local laws regulating agricultural goods sold in interstate commerce, including the California farm animal welfare law Proposition 12. The letter argued that the legislation would infringe on states' rights and undermine U.S. national security by unfairly advantaging the Chinese-owned pork producer WH Group and promoting "Chinese infiltration of American agriculture." In 2024, Waltz received a Congressional Leadership Award from the agricultural policy groups Organization for Competitive Markets and Competitive Markets Action for leading the letter.China
Waltz served on the House China Task Force with 15 Republican lawmakers representing 14 committees of jurisdiction to coordinate policy on China. The Task Force collaborated and released the China Task Force report. The CTF issued a final report that includes 82 key findings and more than 400 forward-leaning recommendations for addressing the China threat.In the 116th Congress, Waltz sponsored the American Critical Mineral Exploration and Innovation Act of 2020 to reduce America's dependence on foreign sources of critical minerals and bring the U.S. supply chain from China back to America by establishing a critical mineral research and development program in the Department of Energy. The bill was signed into law in Section 7002 of Division Z in the FY21 appropriations bill.
Waltz initiated legislation to secure American universities and academies from Chinese espionage, saying that although not all Chinese students in the United States are "spies or bad people", they "have no choice but to provide the Chinese government with whatever information that government demands". In 2020, he secured legislation that provides a universal requirement for researchers from all agencies to disclose all foreign funding sources in applications for federal funding. Failure results in permanent termination of research and development awards to the professor or school, permanent debarment of malign professors, and criminal charges. Further, Waltz directed the Department of Defense to track foreign talent recruitment programs that pose a threat to the United States, particularly as a response to Chinese Communist Party efforts to infiltrate American universities.
Waltz also sponsored legislation to ensure the federal Thrift Savings Plan does not invest in Chinese or Russian markets. Weeks later, President Trump directed the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board to reverse their decision to expand TSP investments.
Foreign policy
Along with a majority of Democrats, Waltz voted for preliminary versions of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) of 2021, which would prevent the president from withdrawing soldiers from Afghanistan without congressional approval. He voted with Democrats again to override President Trump's veto in late December 2020. The Intercept reported on his role in founding and managing a defense contracting company called Metis Solutions, which had been awarded US government contracts, mostly for training Afghan security forces, worth a total of $930 million. As a result of PAE acquiring Metis in 2020, Waltz had personally realized capital gains in the range of $5-25 million, according to disclosure releases.File:King Abdullah II with U.S. Congressman Mike Waltz.jpg|thumb|Waltz with King Abdullah II of Jordan at the U.S. Capitol in February 2023
In 2024, he voted against multiple bills to provide aid to Ukraine.
In January 2023, Waltz and Representative Dan Crenshaw introduced a bill to seek authorization to use US military force to "put us at war with the cartels" in Mexico.
Draft
Waltz voted to include provisions for making women register with the Selective Service in the NDAA of 2022.Immigration
Waltz voted for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, which effectively prohibits Immigration and Customs Enforcement from cooperating with the Department of Health and Human Services to detain or remove illegal alien sponsors of Unaccompanied Alien Children.LGBT rights
On July 19, 2022, Waltz and 46 other Republican representatives voted for the Respect for Marriage Act, which codified the right to same-sex marriage in federal law.2024 presidential election
Waltz endorsed Donald Trump for the Republican Party presidential primaries">Republican Party (United States)">Republican Party presidential primaries.Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023
Waltz was among the 71 Republicans who voted against final passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 in the House.Committee assignments
For the 118th Congress:- Committee on Armed Services
- * Subcommittee on Military Personnel
- * Subcommittee on Readiness
- * Subcommittee on Strategic Forces
- Committee on Foreign Affairs
- * Subcommittee on the Indo-Pacific
- * Subcommittee on Oversight and Accountability
- United States [House Committee on Oversight and Accountability]
- * United States House Oversight Subcommittee on Economic Growth, Energy Policy, and Regulatory Affairs
- Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
- * Subcommittee on Central Intelligence Agency
- * Subcommittee on National Security Agency and Cyber
Caucus memberships
- Congressional Afghan Caucus
- American Flood Coalition
- Army Caucus
- Florida Ports Caucus
- For Country Caucus
- Kurdish American Caucus
- Congressional Automotive Performance and Motorsports Caucus
- Republican Study Committee
- House Special Operations Forces (SOF) Caucus
- Congressional Shipbuilding Caucus
- Congressional Singapore Caucus
- Congressional Taiwan Caucus
- Republican Main Street Partnership
- Women, Peace and Security Caucus
- Congressional Blockchain Caucus
National Security Advisor (January−May 2025)
Tenure at the NSA
On November 12, 2024, President-elect Donald Trump announced that he would appoint Waltz to serve as his national security advisor.On January 20, 2025, Waltz tendered his resignation from the U.S. House of Representatives in order to take up his appointment with the Trump administration. He would assume office the same day. Shortly after becoming National Security Advisor, Waltz would reverse his previous stance supporting a ban on TikTok in the United States.
File:Mike Waltz with Marco Rubio and Pete Hegseth.jpg|thumb|Waltz meeting with Marco Rubio and Pete Hegseth, January 28, 2025
On January 28, 2025, Waltz held a meeting attended by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to "discuss implementing President Trump's vision of securing the nation and prioritizing American interests on both domestic and international fronts."
On February 18, 2025, American and Russian delegations, headed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov, respectively, met in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in order to develop a framework for further Russian invasion of Ukraine|peace negotiations on the war in Ukraine]. Rubio was accompanied by Michael Waltz and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff.
On March 3, 2025, Waltz confirmed on CNN's State of the Union that the United States would continue offensive cyber operations against Russia.
On March 24, 2025, Waltz announced a visit to Greenland, which was criticized by Greenlandic leaders as an aggressive move amid ongoing tensions over U.S. interests in the territory. The Greenland government has accused the United States of foreign interference in its affairs.
Signal app group chat leak
On March 26, 2025, it was revealed by The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg that Waltz had inadvertently added him to a Signal group chat discussing the upcoming US strikes in Yemen targeting Houthi militia before they were publicly known. Signal is a commercial non-government messaging application. In the Signal chat, Waltz appears to initially add a setting that causes the chat messages to be deleted after one week, but later Waltz changes the setting to let the message deletions occur after four weeks. After the strikes occurred, Waltz provided a real-time update to the Signal chat, announcing that the strikes' "first target", which was the Houthi's "top missile guy – we had positive ID of him walking into his girlfriend's building and it's now collapsed".After The Atlantic reported about the Signal chat, the incident sparked national security concerns as Pentagon regulations specifically prohibit the use of Signal and similar messaging apps for sharing classified information. Due to the automatic message deletion setting, there were also concerns on whether the conversations were kept on official record as mandated by the Presidential Records Act. Waltz responded to the reporting by saying that Goldberg "really is the bottom scum of journalists … I don't text him. He wasn't on my phone", but Goldberg "somehow gets on somebody's contact and then get sucked into this group"; Waltz also said of Goldberg: "I didn't see this loser in the group. It looked like someone else", raising the possibility that Goldberg "did it deliberately". Waltz told the media that "I take full responsibility. I built the group", then said: "We made a mistake. We're moving forward".
After the Signal leak, Der Spiegel searched the Internet using a commercial information provider, a commercial people search engine, and leaked databases, which revealed Waltz's personal mobile number, personal email address and its passwords, and Waltz's personal profiles for Microsoft Teams, LinkedIn, WhatsApp and Signal.
On March 30, 2025, The Wall Street Journal reported that according to American officials, Waltz had started and hosted multiple other Signal group chats containing Cabinet members to discuss sensitive issues related to national security, including on military operations and on ceasing hostilities between Ukraine and Russia. In April, The Washington Post reported that officials had stated that Waltz received government communications on his personal Gmail account, including his schedule and work documents, and that Waltz would then transfer data from his schedule to Signal. Both The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post quoted their sources as indicating that Trump did not want to fire Waltz because it would make a left-leaning media outlet look good, and that Waltz would have been fired if it was a right-leaning media outlet that exposed him.
Politico followed with a April 2, 2025, report that reported that Waltz's national security team had created at least 20 Signal group chats discussing official national security issues, on topics such as Ukraine, China, Gaza, Africa, Europe and the Middle East. Politico wrote that its sources were four people who had been added to such Signal chats, one of whom said: "Waltz built the entire NSC communications process on Signal", while another said that Waltz and his national security team had continued to use Signal ever since the transition period before Trump's second presidency began.
Dismissal
On May 1, 2025, it was reported that Mike Waltz and his deputy, Alex Nelson Wong, would leave their respective posts. Waltz was announced as the nominee for United States Ambassador to the United Nations on the same day.On May 3, 2025, it was reported that Waltz and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had held discussions in March 2025 about a potential strike on Iran. These discussions happened without Trump's knowledge, before a state visit by Netanyahu. Trump was reportedly angered that Waltz was attempting to push U.S. policy in a direction Trump was not comfortable with, and the meetings possibly contributed to Waltz's firing.
Ambassador to the United Nations (2025–present)
On May 1, 2025, President Trump nominated Waltz to serve as the next United States Ambassador to the United Nations. During his confirmation hearing by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Rand Paul attempted to delay the vote, but Democratic senator Jeanne Shaheen voted alongside Senate Republicans to advance Waltz to a full floor vote. In the committee hearing, Waltz promised to "Make the UN Great Again."On July 24, 2025, the committee approved of Waltz's nomination by a 12–10 vote for a full Senate confirmation vote. On September 19, 2025, he was confirmed for the office in a 47–43 vote by the U.S. Senate and was sworn in the following day. Waltz took office after presenting his credentials to Secretary-General António Guterres on September 21, 2025. On September 29, 2025, Waltz was also confirmed by the Senate as the United States representative to the United Nations General Assembly.
In October 2025, Waltz condemned the Venezuelan dictatorship under Nicolás Maduro, calling him an "illegitimate leader, convicted in the Southern District of New York".
On January 15, 2026, Waltz addressed the UN Security Council to express his strong support for the demonstrators involved in the 2025–2026 Iranian protests. He warned that all options, including military action, remain available to stop what he described as the "slaughter" of protesters.
Political positions
Waltz has been described as a neoconservative in the Bush–Cheney tradition.War in Afghanistan
In a 2017 interview with The National Interest, Waltz described his views on Afghanistan as primarily oriented around ideological objectives, rather than material objectives. He assessed that Afghanistan could be won through slow cultural conversion by unconventional forces, described as "multiple generations of winning hearts and minds", and anticipated 100 years before such objectives could be achieved, saying:We are in a war of ideas and we are fighting an ideology. It is easy to bomb a tank, but incredibly difficult to bomb an idea. We need a long-term strategy that discredits the ideology of Islamic extremism... We are in a multi-decade war and we are only 15 years in.He reiterated his views at CPAC 2017 as well as an anecdote about his time serving in Afghanistan during the public announcement of the Obama-era troop withdrawals.
In August 2021, during the final stages of the second US withdrawal from Afghanistan, Waltz called on President Biden to reverse course on the war in Afghanistan, urging for the redeployment of special forces on the ground and the use of aerial bombardment of Taliban positions by the US Air Force. In an op-ed for Fox News, he predicted that a return to Afghanistan was inevitable, and viewed withdrawal as a temporary act that would "decimate" local allies and civilians, saying "thousands will die".