In 2018, Taylor was nominated to serve as Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs.[10] Confirmed unanimously by the Senate in October 2018, Taylor became the first African-American woman and youngest to serve in this role, and the only African-American senior official in the State Department.
Trump-Ukraine Scandal
In May 2019, members of Congress criticized President Trump's abrupt recall of Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch from her post in Ukraine after Trump surrogates claimed that Yovanovitch, a career diplomat,[11] was impeding Trump's efforts to pressure the Ukrainian government to investigate his political rival Joe Biden.[12] Yovanovitch testified she had originally been asked in March 2019 to extend her tour in Ukraine through 2020 before her sudden recall in May.[13] But on June 11, 2019, Taylor misled federal lawmakers about the circumstances of Yovanovitch's recall, writing instead that Yovanovitch had been "due to complete her three-year diplomatic assignment in Kyiv this summer" and that the date she left her post "align[ed] with the presidential transition in Ukraine," despite the fact the State Department has no common practice of changing ambassadors based on transitions in foreign leadership.[13][14] Taylor also failed to mention that Yovanovitch had been previously asked to extend her post in Ukraine.
Resignation
On June 18, 2020, Taylor submitted her resignation from the State Department in response to PresidentDonald Trump's handling of protests following the murder of George Floyd; she said "The President’s comments and actions surrounding racial injustice and Black Americans cut sharply against my core values and convictions.".[15]