Top State Department official resigns over Trump’s handling of racial tensions in the United States

Top State Department official Mary Elizabeth Taylor resigns over Donald Trump’s handling of George Floyd protests

  • Mary Elizabeth Taylor, 30, was assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs
  • She was the youngest in history and the first black woman to serve in that post
  • She submitted her resignation to Mike Pompeo on Thursday 
  • Taylor is a registered Republican, previously worked for Mitch McConnell 
  • She also worked for conservative judge Neil Gorsuch, now on Supreme Court  

A senior official at the State Department has resigned in protest at President Donald Trump’s handling of the protests that sprung up after George Floyd was killed by a white cop.

Mary Elizabeth Taylor, 30, the assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs, submitted her resignation on Thursday.

Taylor, the youngest assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs in history and the first black woman to serve in that post, said that the president’s actions ‘cut sharply against my core values and convictions.’  

Mary Elizabeth Taylor has resigned from her senior State Department role in protest

Taylor, a registered Republican who formerly worked for Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, said she felt she had no choice but to resign.

‘Moments of upheaval can change you, shift the trajectory of your life, and mold your character,’ she wrote in her resignation letter, obtained by The Washington Post. 

‘The President’s comments and actions surrounding racial injustice and Black Americans cut sharply against my core values and convictions. 

‘I must follow the dictates of my conscience and resign as Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs.’ 

Her departure is the first high-profile resignation made in protest at the president’s actions since Floyd’s killing that has been made public. 

One member of the Defense Science Board, James Miller, resigned shortly after Trump’s controversial photo op in Lafayette Square – but he was a former Obama administration official who had served on the committee that advises the Pentagon on science issues since 2014. 

Taylor began working at the State Department in October 2018. 

Taylor served as part of conservative judge Neil Gorsuch's team during his senate hearings

Taylor served as part of conservative judge Neil Gorsuch’s team during his senate hearings

She served as the White House’s deputy director for nominations before joining the State Department.

In her White House role, she helped secure more than 400 presidential appointments through the Senate, including those of Neil Gorsuch, now a Supreme Court Justice; CIA director Gina Haspel; Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and her former boss, Mike Pompeo.  

Taylor comes from a family with a history of public service. 

Her mother, Kristin Clark Taylor, served as the White House’s director of media relations under President George H.W. Bush and was the first black woman to hold that job.

The White House and State Department are yet to comment on her departure, but McConnell thanked her for her service. 

‘Leader McConnell appreciates Mary Elizabeth’s service to the Republican Conference and our nation,’ said David Popp, a spokesman for McConnell.

Taylor speaks at her swearing-in ceremony in October 2018, watched by Pompeo and Gorsuch

Taylor speaks at her swearing-in ceremony in October 2018, watched by Pompeo and Gorsuch

Taylor is flanked by Gorsuch and Pompeo and her family after her October 2018 swearing-in

Taylor is flanked by Gorsuch and Pompeo and her family after her October 2018 swearing-in

Trump’s handling of the protests that surged across the U.S. in the aftermath of George Floyd’s May 25 killing have been strongly criticized by his opponents.

He urged the sending in of troops to quell protests, and tweeted: ‘When the shooting starts, the looting starts’ – a highly controversial phrase from the 1960s.

On June 1, peaceful protesters were driven from Lafayette Square, in front of the White House, with riot police, flash bangs and tear gas to clear the way for Trump to pose with a Bible at a nearby church.

He has also been roundly condemned for organizing a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma – site of the worst massacre in U.S. history of African Americans – on Juneteenth, the June 19 day commemorated as the true end of slavery.