Marco Rubio remains at the center of several policy and symbolism battles as Secretary of State, with a string of recent moves that listeners should know about.
According to the United States Department of State website, Rubio marked Finland National Day on December sixth with an official press statement celebrating the deepening security ties between Washington and Helsinki. In that message, he highlighted Finland’s role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and praised its commitment to shared democratic values as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues to reshape the European security landscape. The statement underscored Rubio’s broader effort to spotlight northern Europe’s front line states as key allies in deterring further Russian aggression.
At the same time, Rubio is driving an aggressive internal overhaul of the State Department that reflects the wider priorities of the Trump administration. Fortune reports that he has ordered all diplomatic correspondence to abandon the Calibri font and return to Times New Roman, reversing a change adopted under former secretary Antony Blinken. In a cable sent to United States embassies and consulates, Rubio called the previous switch a product of what he described as misguided diversity, equity and inclusion policies, arguing that it wasted money and diminished the dignity of official documents.
Rubio’s memo, obtained by the Associated Press and described by Fortune, states that typography helps shape how American diplomacy is perceived and that the Calibri move failed to deliver the promised accessibility benefits for people with disabilities. He claimed the change cost the department one hundred forty five thousand dollars, while offering no public evidence for that figure. The order includes instructions to update all official templates, with only narrow exceptions for international treaties and presidential appointment documents, which must continue to use the Courier New typeface in a specific size under existing federal rules.
This font decision is part of a broader campaign to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion structures at the State Department. Fortune notes that since taking office in January, Rubio has shut down diversity and inclusion offices in Washington and at embassies, and has cut off foreign assistance funding for related initiatives abroad, saying he is restoring a purely merit based approach. Supporters see this as rolling back what they consider ideological programs, while critics warn it will harm recruitment, representation and America’s credibility when it speaks about equal rights overseas.
Taken together, Rubio’s recent Finland outreach and his internal directives show a Secretary of State simultaneously emphasizing traditional alliances and reshaping the culture of American diplomacy to align with the current White House.
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