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  • 22/5/2025

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00:00En tu words y en tu actions, lo que la respuesta es.
00:04Y tengo que decir directamente y personalmente que yo regretto votar por la Secretaría de Estado.
00:09Yo yield back.
00:11May I respond?
00:12You may, sir.
00:13Bueno, primero de todo, tu regret por votar por mí me confirma que yo estoy haciendo un buen trabajo.
00:16Based on what I know.
00:17Bueno, eso es un statement, Mr. Secretary.
00:19May I respond, Mr. Chairman?
00:20You may.
00:21I didn't ask.
00:22Senator, please let the Secretary...
00:23I'd be happy to, pero luego puedo responder.
00:26Your time's up, Senator, y willfully used, I might add.
00:29Your remarks do not represent the view of this committee.
00:33Well, Mr. Chairman...
00:34Secretary, please...
00:34Well, I'd like to...
00:34I can't respond to everything he said because much of these are untrue, but I'll go through a few.
00:38First of all, I'm actually very proud of the work we've done with USAID.
00:41For example, I don't regret cutting $10 million for male circumcisions in Mozambique.
00:47I don't know how that makes us stronger and more prosperous as a nation.
00:50I don't regret psychosocial support services in USAID.
00:53I raised to the end, Mr. Secretary.
00:54Can I respond, Mr. Chairman, or do I...
00:55Senator, I'd ask you to suspend.
00:57You had seven straight minutes of...
01:00I chose to use my time that way, Mr. Chairman.
01:03That's my right to use my time that way.
01:04Please suspend, Secretary Rubio.
01:06Well, I can go on.
01:07I mean, there's other things here.
01:08We spent $227,000 for Big Cat's YouTube channel from USAID.
01:12We spent $14 million for social cohesion in Mali, whatever the hell that means.
01:17So I can go on and on.
01:18I got the list here, and there's more.
01:20I didn't even bring the whole list.
01:21In the case of El Salvador, absolutely, absolutely, we deported gang members, gang members, including
01:27the one that you had a margarita with.
01:29And that guy is a human trafficker, and that guy is a gangbanger, and the evidence is going
01:34to be clear.
01:35In the days to come, you're going to see who you went to deport.
01:37I'm sorry, Mr. Chairman.
01:38Secretary Rubio has the floor.
01:39Mr. Chairman, he can't make unsubstantiated comments like that.
01:42Secretary Rubio has the floor.
01:44You had your time.
01:45Secretary Rubio should take that testimony to the federal court of the United States because he
01:49hasn't done it under oath.
01:50Here's another point, okay?
01:52There is a division in our government between the federal branch and the judicial branch.
01:56No judge, and the judicial branch, cannot tell me or the president how to conduct foreign
02:00policy.
02:01No judge can tell me how I have to outreach to a foreign partner or what I need to say to
02:05them.
02:05And if I do reach to that foreign partner and talk to them, I have them under no obligation
02:09to share that with a judiciary branch.
02:11Just like a judge cannot order me to negotiate with a foreign minister of Russia, they cannot order
02:16me to negotiate with a foreign minister or the president of El Salvador.
02:19And if I did negotiate with them, which we have responded to them, and we've told them
02:23we've had communications with the president of El Salvador, I am under no obligation under
02:27our division of powers in this country to share with the judicial branch how I conducted
02:33diplomacy of the United States.
02:35It would actually be counterproductive.
02:36If I started sharing with courts or, frankly, with the media, my conversations with foreign
02:41leaders and all of their details, no foreign leader would talk to me again, and we would
02:45break trust with them.
02:46So I have complied with every court order.
02:49What I won't comply with is an order to disclose what I'm saying and what we're talking about
02:53with a foreign leader, because then they won't talk to me.
02:55Diplomacy doesn't work that way.
02:57About the student visas, let me say this.
02:59I don't deport anybody, and I don't snatch anybody.
03:02The State Department does not have officers in the street snatching everybody.
03:05What I do is revoke visas.
03:07And it's very simple.
03:07A visa is not a right, it is a privilege.
03:11People apply for student visas to come into the United States and study.
03:15And if you tell me that you're coming to the United States to lead campus crusades, to
03:18take over libraries, and try to burn down buildings and acts of violence, we're not
03:23going to give you a visa.
03:23Is that what Ms. Oztork did?
03:25We're not going to give you a visa.
03:26Is that what she did?
03:27Come on, Mr. Secretary.
03:28You're just blowing smoke here now.
03:30The bottom line is, if you're coming here to stir up trouble on our campuses, we will
03:34deny you a visa.
03:34Does the First Amendment apply to people living in the United States?
03:38And we're going to do more.
03:39There are more coming.
03:40We're going to continue to revoke the visas of people who are here as guests and are disrupting
03:44our higher education facilities.
03:46People are paying money.
03:47These kids pay money to go to school, and they have to walk through a bunch of lunatics who
03:51are here on student visas.
03:52They're disrupting the foreign policy of the United States.
03:53I want to do more.
03:54I hope we can find more of these people.
03:55That's pathetic, Mr. Secretary.
03:56In fact, the other day, some guys led a riot.
03:59I forgot what university it was.
04:00And I asked, please, can you find the arrest records of all the people that were arrested
04:04at that riot at that campus?
04:05Because if any of them have a visa, we're going to revoke it.
04:07I feel so much safer.
04:08All right.
04:08Lock up people like Ms. Oztork, Mr. Secretary.
04:10We've had enough time.
04:12Lock up people like Ms. Oztork, Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary,

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