WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is proposing a major overhaul of the U.S. State Department that would eliminate more than 100 offices including some working on war crimes and rights advocacy to ensure the agency is in line with President Donald Trump’s “America First” priorities.
The plan, which Congress has been notified about, would eliminate 132 of the department’s 734 bureaus and offices, an internal State Department memo seen by Reuters said. Undersecretaries will submit plans to reduce staff by 15%, the document added.
It was not immediately clear how many people would be laid off as a result of the revamp, but a report in online publication the Free Press, which Secretary of State Marco Rubio posted on X, said an additional 700 positions would be eliminated in the shuttered offices.
An internal working group will lead implementation of the reorganization and develop detailed plans for each part of the department by July 1, Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote to staff in an internal email seen by Reuters.
The shake-up comes as part of an unprecedented push by Trump and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk to shrink the federal government, saying U.S. taxpayer money is misspent. The effort has led to the firing of thousands of government employees.
“In its current form, the Department is bloated, bureaucratic, and unable to perform its essential diplomatic mission in this new era of great power competition,” Rubio said in a statement.
Both Rubio and officials said the bloated structure of the State Department made it impossible to quickly and efficiently make decisions, and that the new plan would attempt to empower regional bureaus to increase functionality and remove offices and programs not aligned with America’s core national interests.
Trump issued a separate executive order in February directing Rubio to revamp the U.S. Foreign Service and how the State Department functions to ensure that the U.S. diplomatic corps faithfully implements his agenda.
The proposed reorganization appears to be less dramatic than many in the department had feared, and a memo that had circulated among State Department employees over the weekend that was proposing to eliminate nearly all of the Department’s African affairs bureau among other drastic changes.
Representative Greg Meeks, the top Democrat on the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, said the reorganization, coming after the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), would cede space to U.S. adversaries.
“These potentially sweeping changes have less to do with streamlining the State Department and more to do with eviscerating American soft power, including our values-driven defense of human rights and democracy globally,” Meeks said in a statement.
The plan is separate from potential budget cuts, which could see the department lose about half of its funding but are yet to be decided by Trump’s White House.
The biggest changes proposed were the elimination of the Undersecretary of Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights, a part of the Department that Rubio accused of diverting from U.S. priorities as he took aim at what he called “ideological capture” at the agency.
That branch, he wrote in an article on Substack, “provided a fertile environment for activists to redefine “human rights” and “democracy” and to pursue their projects at the taxpayer expense, even when they were in direct conflict with the goals of the Secretary, the President, and the American people.”