Secretary of State Marco Rubio went viral this week after photos surfaced of him wearing what appeared to be oversized shoes. The timing was notable because a report had just come out about President Donald Trump‘s habit of gifting his officials dress shoes, which they then feel pressured to wear.
According to Mediaite, President Trump apparently guesses people’s shoe sizes on the spot, then has an aide order $145 Florsheim shoes, which arrive at the White House about a week later in a brown box. Recipients reportedly feel compelled to wear them. One anonymous White House official said, “All the boys have them.” Another told the Wall Street Journal, “It’s hysterical because everybody’s afraid not to wear them.”
The photos of Rubio’s feet, showing him in noticeably large shoes, went viral on Tuesday, March 11, 2026. One cabinet secretary reportedly had to set aside his Louis Vuittons because of this, wearing the gifted Florsheims around the president instead.
Trump’s shoe gifting goes well beyond his closest cabinet members
Rubio is far from the only recipient. The list reportedly includes Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, White House communications director Steven Cheung, White House deputy chief of staff James Blair, speechwriter Ross Worthington, and Senator Lindsey Graham.
Even media figures Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson are reportedly on the list. This comes at a time when Trump’s foreign policy decisions are drawing global scrutiny. People have had strong opinions about the situation. Journalist Euan MacDonald pointed out that “Who buys shoes for other people? Mostly parents for their children.” He argued that Trump buying shoes for his cabinet is a way to belittle and humiliate them.
MacDonald also suggested that Rubio’s willingness to “shuffle around in shoes that are too big for him” shows a “lack of dignity and self-respect before Trump.” Conservative columnist Matt Lewis raised a more practical concern, worrying that the ill-fitting shoes could “cause blisters.” Meanwhile, Trump has also been making headlines for threatening allies over refusing to back the Iran conflict, adding to a wider pattern of pressure tactics from the administration.
The shoe gifting appears to be an unspoken but well-established practice within the administration. Officials seem to feel they cannot decline or avoid wearing the shoes, even if the fit is wrong.
Whether seen as a quirky presidential habit or something more pointed, the story has captured widespread attention and turned Rubio’s footwear into one of the more unusual news moments coming out of Washington this year.
Published: Mar 12, 2026 02:59 pm