The president’s State of the Union address will also be a ācelebrationā of 250 years of America’s independence, the White House press secretary said.
WASHINGTON ā PresidentĀ Donald Trump began his State of the Union address on Tuesday, a speech where he plans to declare his policies have the job market and domestic manufacturing booming ā hoping to convinceĀ increasingly wary Americans that the economy is stronger than many believe and that they should vote for more of the same by backing Republicans duringĀ Novemberās midterm elections.
Republicans chanted āUSA! USA!ā as Trump, wearing a long red tie and a blue suit, stepped to the lectern in the House. Most Democrats remained seated without applauding. Some of the partyās lawmakers registered their opposition by refraining from attending the speech.
āIt is indeed a turnaround for the ages,ā Trump said early on.
Excerpts released by the White House before he began Tuesday’s address said Trump will vow that, āMoving forward, factories, jobs, investment, and trillions of dollars will continue pouring into the United States of America.”
Trump is set to use his speech to championĀ his immigration crackdowns andĀ slashing of the federal government, as well as his push to preserveĀ widespread tariffs that theĀ Supreme Court just struck down and his ability to direct quick-hit military actions around the world, including inĀ Iran andĀ Venezuela.
āWe have achieved a transformation like no one has ever seen before, and a turnaround for the ages,ā Trump plans to say, according to the excerpts. āWe will never go back to where we were just a short time ago.ā
The balancing act of celebrating hisĀ whirlwind first year back in the White House while making a convincing case for his party in midterm races in which he personally won’t be on the ballot could be a tall order.
It might prove especially delicate for Trump, given how happy he is to veer off script and ignore carefully crafted messaging.
A main theme will be that the country is booming with a rise in domestic manufacturing and new jobs, despite many Americans not feeling that way. āItās going to be a long speech because we have so much to talk about,” said Trump, who promised a heavy dose of talk about the economy.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump will argue that Republicans are best suited to continue tackling the public’s concerns about the cost of living.
āThe president’s going to make the case that three more years with him in the White House and with Republicans on Capitol Hill we can finally achieve the American dream in this country again that we had in his first term but was lost because of Joe Biden and the Democrats over the past four years,ā Leavitt told reporters at the White House.
The Olympic gold-medal-winning U.S. menās hockey team visited the White House and was invited by Trump to attend his address. The U.S. women’s hockey team, who also won the gold medal, declined an invitation to the White House.
In it, the president plans to announce that tech companies involved in artificial intelligence are agreeing to pay higher electricity rates in areas where their data centers are located, according to a White House official who insisted on anonymity to discuss the speech. Data centers tend to use large volumes of electricity, potentially increasing the cost of power to other consumers in the area.
Trump is also expected to decry the Supreme Court ruling against hisĀ signature tariff policies and talk about his attempts toĀ maneuver around that decision without depending on Congress or spooking financial markets.
The Supreme Court justices in attendance were the same as those who came to Trumpās address to a joint session of Congress last March: Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kegan.
Trump shook hands before his speech began with Coney Barrett, after previously slamming her for siding with the majority against Trump’s tariffs ā despite him appointing her to the high court in his first term.
Trump is also expected to urge lawmakers to increase military funding andĀ tighten voter identification requirements, while defending immigration operations that have drawn bipartisan criticismĀ following the shooting deaths of two American citizens.
Jeff Shesol, a former speechwriter for Democratic President Bill Clinton, said Trump has typically used State of the Union addresses to offer more conventional tones than his usual bombast ā but he’s stillĀ apt to exaggerate repeatedly.
āHis job, for the sake of his party, is to show the silver lining,ā Shesol said. āBut if heās going to insist that the silver lining is gold, no oneās buying it. And it will be a very difficult position on the campaign trail for Republicans to defend.ā
Before Trump’s speech, Senate Democrats blocked a bill to restore funding to the Department of Homeland Security, pressing for new limits on immigration enforcement that Republicans have opposed.
āTonight, I am demanding the full and immediate restoration of all funding for the Border Security and Homeland Security of the United States,ā Trump plans to say, according to the excerpts.
Michael Waldman, Clinton’s former chief speechwriter, said second-term presidents “have a tough job because what they all want to say is, āHey, look what a great job Iāve been doing ā why donāt you love me?āā
Affordability questions loom large
No matter what his prepared remarks say, Trump relishes deviating into personal grievances, meaning Tuesday will probably feature topics likeĀ denying that he lost the 2020 presidential election.
His lack of messaging discipline has been on display after concerns about the high costs of living helpedĀ propel Democratic wins around the country on Election Day last November. The White House subsequently promised that the president would travel the country nearly every week to reassure Americans he was taking affordability seriously. But Trump hasĀ spent more time blaming Democrats and scoffing at the notion that kitchen table issues demand attention.
Trump instead boasts of havingĀ tamed inflation and says he has theĀ economy humming, given that the Dow Jones Industrial Average recentlyĀ exceeded 50,000 points for the first time.
Such gains don’t feel tangible to those without stock portfolios, however. There also are persistent fears that tariffs stokedĀ higher prices, which could eventually hurt the economy and job creation.Ā Economic growth slowed in the last three months of last year.
It is potentially politically perilous ahead of November elections that could deliver congressional wins to Democrats, just asĀ 2018ās blue wave created a strong check to his administration during his first term.
Democrats’ response to Trump’s speech will be delivered by Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger, whose affordability-focused message helped her flipĀ a Republican-held office in November. Several congressional Democrats, meanwhile, plan to skip Trump’s speech in protest, instead attending a rally known as the āPeople’s State of the Unionā on Washingtonās National Mall.
Foreign policy in focus
Trump’s address comes asĀ two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran.
The president will recount howĀ U.S. airstrikes last summerĀ pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and laudĀ the raid that ousted Venezuelan President NicolasĀ NicolĆ”s Maduro, as well as his administration’s brokering ofĀ a ceasefire in Israelās war with Hamas in Gaza.
But he alsoĀ strained U.S. military alliances with NATO, thanks to his push toĀ seize Greenland from Denmark and his failure to take a harder line with Russian PresidentĀ Vladimir Putin in seeking an end toĀ its war in Ukraine. Tuesday was the fourth anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war.

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