The disparate views of the state of our union
The biggest news coming out of President Trump’s speech at the Capitol on Tuesday night was that he stayed on script.
“The president’s state of the union was notable for something his second term has largely lacked: restraint,” says Politico. “There were the mistakes he avoided making: Trump did not attack the Supreme Court. He did not blitz members of his own party who have criticized him. He avoided rambling, angry digressions from the script.”
Reuters says: “For much of the speech, Trump was uncharacteristically disciplined, mostly appearing to stick to his prepared remarks and eschewing his usual stream-of-consciousness digressions. But he flashed his combative side while discussing his immigration crackdown, exchanging shouted insults with several Democratic lawmakers.”
Trump, in sales mode, used the speech to deliver an upbeat vision of the U.S. economy, says The Associated Press in the best summary of the speech I’ve seen. “But that portrayal collides with the sentiment of Americans who remain anxious about their finances and feel they haven’t benefited from Trump’s policies. He took the high road to honor the gold medal-winning U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team and a war hero before pivoting abruptly to a darker tone as he ridiculed Democrats.”
In her Democratic response to Trump’s speech, Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger offered a sharp contrast to Trump’s depiction of the nation as being in a “golden age,” saying families are still struggling under Trump’s policies.
On the National Mall, hundreds of people, including about 30 Democratic members of Congress, turned out in the cold for the alternative “People’s State of the Union,” reports The Guardian. Attendees held signs reading “No Money for ICE” and “Healthcare Not Warfare.” There were an estimated 220,000 live viewers of the event on YouTube and other platforms, a spokesperson at event organizer MoveOn told The Guardian.
Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said: “Between now and November, the president will make every effort to discourage Americans from voting. He will make it harder to register and turn out, he may send ICE agents to polling places to intimidate our citizens. He will cast doubt on the results when his party loses.” The crowd cheered when Schiff asked: “Are you ready to throw the bums out in November? Are you ready to defend our democracy?”
At the “State of the Swamp” counter-event at the National Press Club, green frog-themed swag filled every seat. Members of the Portland Frog Brigade, a group that became famous after wearing inflatable frog suits to ICE protests last fall, had come to D.C. to lead the evening’s swampish revels.
Among the speakers at that event was former Montana Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock, who exhorted the crowd to “organize” to “fight for our elections.”
“Our voices matter. I’m not sure they’ve ever mattered more,” he said. ”If we don’t fight for our elections we’ll have nothing left to fight for.”
Also in the news
U.S. embassy to offer its first consular services at an Israeli settlement in West Bank
Iran pushes back against Trump ahead of Geneva talks as U.S. deploys the most aircraft, warships into Mideast in decades
Legal advocates seek to stop CBP policy pressuring unaccompanied children to self-deport
Hegseth gives Anthropic a Friday deadline to open its AI tech for unrestricted military use or risk losing its government contract
Senate aviation safety bill rejected by House after Pentagon opposition
Supreme Court rules 5-4 that the Postal Service can’t be sued, even when mail is intentionally not delivered
Judge bars federal government from ‘wholesale’ search of Washington Post reporter’s seized electronic devices
NPR investigation: Justice Department has withheld and removed some Epstein files related to Trump
Robert Reich: How California can negate the 'Citizens United' ruling that enabled unlimited corporate spending in elections
WSJ: Breaking down the doomsday AI memo that appears to have sparked a stock selloff
More than a dozen states sue Trump administration over its rollback of vaccine recommendations for children
You can call the Capitol switchboard, (202) 224-3121, and be connected to the offices of your representative and senators. To email your House member and your two senators, you can connect to their websites at Congress.gov. Most lawmakers seem to only accept emails from their constituents, but these leaders accept emails from Americans nationwide, at:
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer
Senate Majority Leader John Thune

