Marco Rubio, as U.S. Secretary of State, delivered the talk (a keynote speech/remarks) at the Munich Security Conference on February 14, 2026. Multiple sources, including the official U.S. Department of State transcript and video releases, attribute the speech directly to him as the speaker and presenter.
There is no public information indicating it was written by a ghostwriter or specific speechwriter. High-level officials like Secretaries of State often collaborate with staff on drafts, but Rubio is noted in some contexts (including prior speeches and X discussions around this event) as someone who writes or heavily contributes to his own material. Coverage describes it as his remarks, with phrases like "Rubio said" or "Secretary Rubio addressed," and the State Department publishes it under his name without crediting another author.
The speech emphasized shared U.S.-European civilizational roots (famously calling the U.S. a "child of Europe"), critiqued European policies on migration and other issues, urged transatlantic renewal under Trump administration priorities, and received applause and a standing ovation—contrasting with the prior year's more contentious address by VP JD Vance.
If you're referring to a rumored or specific claim about authorship (e.g., from social media speculation), no credible reports confirm anyone else as the writer.
Grok
There is no public information indicating it was written by a ghostwriter or specific speechwriter. High-level officials like Secretaries of State often collaborate with staff on drafts, but Rubio is noted in some contexts (including prior speeches and X discussions around this event) as someone who writes or heavily contributes to his own material. Coverage describes it as his remarks, with phrases like "Rubio said" or "Secretary Rubio addressed," and the State Department publishes it under his name without crediting another author.
The speech emphasized shared U.S.-European civilizational roots (famously calling the U.S. a "child of Europe"), critiqued European policies on migration and other issues, urged transatlantic renewal under Trump administration priorities, and received applause and a standing ovation—contrasting with the prior year's more contentious address by VP JD Vance.
If you're referring to a rumored or specific claim about authorship (e.g., from social media speculation), no credible reports confirm anyone else as the writer.
Grok
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