UPDATE (February 4, 2025, 4:19 p.m. ET): This report has been updated to reflect the fact that Andrew Puzder’s ex-wife retracted her spousal abuse allegations before his first nomination.
In August 2018, officials in the Trump White House started receiving media calls about a speechwriter and policy aide named Darren Beattie. Journalists wanted to know whether Beattie’s colleagues were aware of his role at a conference regularly attended by well-known white nationalists. Soon after, he was fired.
Seven years later, however, Beattie is apparently back in Team Trump’s good graces. Semafor reported:
Secretary of State Marco Rubio will appoint Darren Beattie, a speechwriter in President Donald Trump’s first term, acting undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, two people briefed on the plans said. Beattie has been a vocal critic of broad swathes of American foreign policy and represents a dramatic step away from the establishment Republicanism Rubio long embodied: In a widely-circulated essay on the site he founded, Revolver, Beattie compared the “color revolutions” that Western democracies backed in Eastern Europe in the 1990s and 2000s to “the coordinated efforts of government bureaucrats, NGOs, and the media to oust President Trump.”
While the move hasn’t been independently verified by MSNBC or NBC News, other news organizations are also reporting that Beattie is joining the State Department.
As it turns out, however, he’s not the only reject from Trump’s first term who’s facing a friendlier terrain in the Republican president’s second term. Around this time eight years ago, for example, Andrew Puzder, Trump’s choice to lead the Department of Labor, saw his nomination collapse in the face of bipartisan opposition.
Puzder faced a variety of controversies, including spousal abuse accusations, which he denied. His ex-wife renounced her abuse claims several times over the years, including prior to the 2017 nomination fight. Nevertheless, as Trump’s first term got underway, even Senate Republicans, who tended to act like rubber stamps for the president’s nominees, told the White House that Puzder was a bridge too far, in light of the scope of the controversies.
Two weeks ago, Trump nominated Puzder to serve as the next U.S. ambassador to the European Union, despite what transpired eight years ago, and despite his lack of diplomatic experience.








