Fired ‘Idiot’ Waltz Leaked One Last Signal Chat with Vance


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Leaked Signal Chats

A photo captured Mike Waltz, the recently fired National Security Advisor, using the Signal app during his final cabinet meeting. The image shows ongoing chats with Vice President JD Vance and others. One message reads, "I have confirmation from my counterpart it's turned off, He is going to be here in..." The sender remains unclear. Chats with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff were also visible but unreadable.

White House Response

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung defended Waltz's Signal use, stating it's an approved app on government phones.

Waltz's Short Tenure

Waltz's 101-day tenure was the second shortest in White House history. His downfall began with the "Signalgate" incident in March, where he mistakenly included a journalist in a group chat discussing a military strike, revealing sensitive information and questioning Trump's decisions among officials.

Aftermath and Future

Despite initially supporting Waltz after Signalgate, Trump reportedly began searching for a replacement weeks later. Rubio serves as a temporary replacement, with Witkoff a potential long-term successor. Waltz's new role as UN Ambassador was announced shortly after his dismissal.

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Fired National Security Adviser Mike Waltz can‘t help but leak his Signal chats.

Waltz, whose downfall was precipitated by Signalgate in March, was photographed on the messaging application again on Wednesday during his final meeting as a member of President Donald Trump’s cabinet.

Waltz, 51, did not bother to keep his screen hidden.

Mike Waltz’s phone during Wednesday’s cabinet meeting at the White House. He was fired the following day. Reuters

A zoomed-in look at Waltz’s phone shows he was texting Vice President JD Vance and had a voice call with Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. In other Signal chats, the last names of Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff can be seen.

“I have confirmation from my counterpart it’s turned off,” the message with Vance reads. “He is going to be here in...”

It is unclear whether Waltz or Vance sent the message. The Rubio and Witkoff text chains cannot be read at all.

Former National Security Advisor Michael Waltz looks at his phone—perhaps loading up the Trump cabinet member Signal group chat a final time—before a TV interview at the White House on Thursday. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung defended Waltz’s continued use of Signal in an X post Thursday, writing in response to a photo of the former security adviser using the app: “Signal is an approved app that is loaded onto our government phones. Thank you for your attention to this matter.”

The exposed phone screen epitomizes Waltz’s 101-day stint leading the National Security Council—the second-shortest in White House history, trailing only Trump’s first National Security Secretary, Michael Flynn, who lasted just three weeks.

It was all downhill for Waltz after he mistakenly added The Atlantic‘s Jeffrey Goldberg to a Signal group chat in March that discussed a U.S. military strike in Yemen.

The gaffe was hugely embarrassing for the Trump administration. Not only did it reveal that top officials were using a commercial application known to be susceptible to hacking to discuss an attack plan, but it also revealed that Vance, a loyal MAGA soldier publicly, was questioning the decision-making of Trump behind closed doors.

Trump stood behind Waltz in the aftermath of Signalgate, perhaps hesitant to see his administration suffer from the same sort of intense turnover that plagued his first.

Politico reported Thursday that Trump began searching for a Waltz replacement weeks ago, however, in the immediate aftermath of the Signal fiasco. Rubio has been named his temporary replacement, but a long-term National Security Adviser is yet to be announced by the White House. Witkoff has been named as the likely favorite in reports.

Waltz, who left his job as a Republican congressman from a deep-red district in Florida to join the Trump administration, was announced Thursday as Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations.

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