Trump is more of an isolationist, while Marco Rubio holds more of a traditional Republican approach to foreign policy, experts say.
With the overwhelming election of President Donald Trump to a second term, America welcomes an opportunity to reorient its foreign policy.
Departing President Joe Biden offered a farewell brag this week to his State Department about how his tenure had improved America's stature abroad. In his
Speaking as much to the history books as to the civil servants gathered at the State Department on Monday afternoon, President Joe Biden said U.S. foreign policy during his term had put the United States and its allies on a stronger footing, another effort to use his final days in office to burnish his presidential legacy.
Biden defended his conduct of foreign policy at the State Department on Monday: "The United States is winning the worldwide competition compared to four years ago." That is mostly true, writes Michael Sean Winters.
I examine what is happening with President-elect Donald Trump’s transition to the White House. This week: Donald Trump has vowed to remake U.S. foreign policy and has assembled a team
As Trump moves back into the White House, Musk's unwanted involvement in the domestic affairs of US allies may have unintended consequences
To the relief of Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese, incoming US secretary of state Marco Rubio has confirmed Donald Trump’s “very strong support” for the AUKUS military pact that is supposed to deliver Australia at least three nuclear submarines by 2050.
Republican leaders are poised to take over both houses of Congress and as well as the Oval Office and with that change of leadership, the members of the party be able to finally implement policies they have been dying to put in place since.
How this plays out remains to be seen, although, given the failures of the last four years, it is worth trying something new, no matter how unorthodox it may seem.
Rubio -- long known as a Russia and China hawk in the Senate -- has been accused of dialing back his interventionist foreign policy approach to align with Trump's positions and may face fresh criticism from opponents who believe he might prioritize serving as a yes man to president over serving the country.