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Thursday, March 06, 2025
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Trump's address to Congress showed country's stark partisan divide

publish time

05/03/2025

publish time

05/03/2025

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US President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington on March 4. (AP)

WASHINGTON, March 5, (AP): A president's speech to Congress - even without the formal gloss of a State of the Union address - is typically a time for a call to national unity and predictable claims about the country being strong. But that wasn’t President Donald Trump’s plan. His speech on Tuesday night was relentlessly partisan, boasting about his election victory and criticizing Democrats for failing to recognize his accomplishments.

The hard edge reflected Trump’s steamroller approach to his second term, brushing aside opposition and demanding loyalty throughout the federal government. Here are key takeaways from the speech: Trump set a tone of division almost from his first words, calling his predecessor Joe Biden the worst president in history and chiding Democrats as so stinting in their praise of him they would not even grant him perfunctory applause.

He placed himself alongside the country's first president, George Washington, when discussing what he said were the flood of early achievements of his second term. He was speaking to a house divided. Republicans stood and cheered. For Democrats, it was silence, with occasional shouts of protest, with the only applause when he announced that Ukraine wanted to restart peace negotiations.

Trump leaned hard into cultural flashpoints - his opposition to affirmative action, diversity programs and transgender rights. He inflated the scale of his victory in November, the margin of which was actually among the smallest in American history. The tenor was more that of a campaign speech than an address to Congress.

In a stunning breach of protocol and a measure of the fractious politics, one Democrat, Rep. Al Green of Texas, stood up and shouted at Trump, gesturing toward the president with his cane. He refused to sit when asked by House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who ordered him removed. Trump described Democrats as a lost cause. "There is absolutely nothing I can say to make them happy,” he said.

Trump has been unsparing in his criticism of Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. But towards the end of his address, Trump read from a letter from Zelenskyy he had received earlier in the day. "The letter reads Ukraine is ready to come to the negotiating table as soon as possible to bring lasting peace closer,” Trump said. "Nobody wants peace more than the Ukrainians ... My team and I stand ready to work under President Trump’s strong leadership to get a peace that lasts.”

It remains to be seen if the letter will mark a detente in the long-complicated Trump-Zelenskyy relationship. Late last week, Trump and Vice President JD Vance used an Oval Office meeting to rip Zelenskyy for being insufficiently grateful for the billions of dollars in US aid poured into Ukraine. Trump then abruptly ended the White House meeting where the deal -designed to give the US access to Ukraine’s deposits of titanium, lithium, manganese and more - was supposed to be signed.