MUNICH — Marco Rubio and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez delivered dueling visions of how to remake America and the world on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference. And while thousands of miles away from Washington, their arguments could easily have been interpreted as a preview of the 2028 U.S. election.
The secretary of state gave a clear distillation of a MAGA-influenced Republican foreign policy in an address that sparked a standing ovation from Europeans seemingly unnerved by the first year of Donald Trump’s second term — a far cry from the jaw-dropping silence of last year, when Vice President Vance stunned European leaders in Munich with a lecture about ending their isolation of far-right parties.
“We do not need to abandon the system of international cooperation we authored, and we don’t need to dismantle the global institutions of the old order that together we built,” said Rubio, referring to NATO and the United Nations. “But these must be reformed. These must be rebuilt.”
The New York Democratic congresswoman, on the other hand, perhaps fueling speculation about her presidential aspirations, laid out what her party has labeled a “foreign-policy for working class Americans” agenda addressing economic inequality, authoritarianism and A.I.’s rapid rise. Asked at a meeting with a small group of reporters if her plans were too idealistic, Ocasio-Cortez said radical change is needed.
“We have no other choice. The only alternative is a world that is dominated by a handful of elites, a handful of oligarchs that sit on pretend democracies and make backdoor deals with one another,” she said. “And that, to me, is not the world that the vast majority of people in the world want to live in.”
Ocasio-Cortez expanded on remarks she made on the first day of the conference in which she argued that addressing the economic uncertainty of working-class voters would help “stave off the scourges of authoritarianism” globally. She added on Saturday, “Much of this right-wing populist uprising that is built on strength of authoritarianism is based on a material decline of the working class.”
Ocasio-Cortez, who floated a global minimum tax on corporations, said trade agreements should be examined for corporate hand-outs that would be voted down in Congress if they were required to be enacted as laws.









