JD Vance and other officials told Trump to fire Waltz. There was just one reason he didn’t

You May Be Interested In:Los Angeles: Car ploughs into crowd outside LA nightclub, injuring 30


Reporting by multiple outlets suggests that while President Donald Trump has been outwardly supportive of his national security adviser since the Signalgate security breach fiasco, internal discussions about Mike Waltz’s future were somewhat different.

After a day of bruising headlines about the now-infamous group chat that has inadvertently included journalist Jeffrey Goldberg, on Wednesday evening, Vice President JD Vance, Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and top personnel official Sergio Gor had a private meeting with the president, Politico reports.

In that meeting, they suggested that it might be best for Waltz to be dismissed, two people familiar with the conversations who were granted anonymity to discuss them told the outlet.

While the president agreed that Waltz was at fault for the debacle, he ultimately decided not to fire him for one reason — that it would be a win for Democrats and the liberal media.

President Donald Trump and National Security Adviser Mike Waltz (Getty Images)

“They don’t want to give the press a scalp,” one of the people, a White House ally close with the team, told Politico.

According to Axios, Trump officials say the president was more angry that Waltz had Goldberg’s number in his phone than he was about the exposure of sensitive military strike details. Things got worse after Waltz’s sloppy explanation on Laura Ingraham’s Fox News show.

The New York Times reports that even before the Signal leak, Waltz was already on “shaky footing” and was viewed as too hawkish and keen for military action against Iran. This has caused friction with other members of the Trump team and the wider MAGA world.

On Friday’s visit to Greenland, Waltz accompanied Vance and, according to an official who spoke to Axios, was counseled by him on the flight back about “knowing his place” and “working more collaboratively.”

For now, key administration figures are standing by Waltz, with statements of support from Trump, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, and Vance again in Greenland.

“If you think you’re going to force the president of the United States to fire anybody, you’ve got another thing coming,” he said.

“President Trump has said it on Monday, on Tuesday, on Wednesday, on Thursday, and I’m the vice president saying it here on Friday, we are standing behind our entire national security team.”

While Waltz still has his job five days after the scandal broke, that doesn’t mean he’s safe, the two people who spoke to Politico said. Indeed, they say that some officials are waiting for the right time to let Waltz go once the news cycle moves on.

When might that be?

One predicted: “They’ll stick by him for now, but he’ll be gone in a couple of weeks.”

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Yahoo news home
Old clip of arson suspect reignites anti-Chinese attitudes as South Korea battles deadly blazes
dpa international
Israeli military says Hezbollah commander of Khiam area killed
Download app from appStore
Biden is giving the second highest civilian award to the leaders of the Jan. 6 congressional panel
Yahoo news home
DR Congo M23 rebels close in on second major city
A newly registered Somali refugee supports herself on a chain-link perimeter fence outside a registration and medical aid facility at the Dadaab Internally Displaced People (IDP) camp in eastern Kenya on July 23, 2011
‘We live in fear’ – forced expulsions taint Kenya’s safe haven image
Houston Astros
Astros $150 Million Franchise Legend Projected To Re-Sign With Houston
Flashpoint Daily | © 2025 | News