In record State of the Union, Trump spars with Dems, touts economy and immigration
The speech was a chance for Trump to make his case ahead of the midterms.
President Donald Trump delivered his State of the Union Tuesday night in Washington, as a majority of Americans disapprove of how he is handling inflation, tariffs, relations with other countries, immigration and the economy, according to an ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll.
For Trump, the speech was a chance to make the case directly to millions of Americans ahead of November's midterm elections where control of Congress is at stake. Dozens of Democrats, meanwhile, skipped the speech in protest.
Key Headlines
Trump to deliver speech as DHS shutdown continues
Hours before Trump was scheduled to give his speech, the Senate failed to advance a procedural motion to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
By a vote of 50-45, senators for the second time failed to advance House-passed legislation to fund and fully reopen DHS. The first vote, on Feb. 12, failed 52-47. It's now 11 days into the partial government shutdown.
A group of five bipartisan senators: Deb Fischer, R-Neb.; Maggie Hassan, D-NH; Rand Paul, R-Ky; Thom Tillis, R-NC; and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-RI, did not vote on Tuesday.
Sen. John Fetterman, D-Penn., voted with Republicans for the appropriations bill. Majority Leader John Thune voted no in order to procedurally make the piece of legislation up for reconsideration.
-ABC News' Isabella Murray
Melania Trump's guests are related to her education, tech and foster care initiatives
First lady Melania Trump is bringing two guests to the State of the Union address to help highlight her AI and foster care initiatives.
She'll be joined by Sierra Burns, who is a recipient of the first lady's Foster Youth to Independence Program and Everest Nevraumont, a 10-year old student who has talked about her AI use in her education, according to the first lady's office.
"Sierra and Everest embody my ongoing mission to uplift America’s foster youth and expand opportunity for our next generation through education and technology," Melania Trump said in a statement.
ABC News’ Fritz Farrow
Schumer predicts a ‘painful and tedious’ speech
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Trump’s speech would be “painful and tedious for the American people,” and that the president would blame Democrats and the Supreme Court for the nation’s troubles.
“America is deeply unhappy with Trump's leadership, and he'll blame everyone else for our country's troubles. He'll blame Biden, he'll blame the Supreme Court. He'll point the finger at everyone but himself,” Schumer said Tuesday afternoon.
"So tonight, Americans aren't going to get the real state of the union ... What Americans will get is a state of deception, a state of denial,” he said.
Schumer said that some of the chaos was the administration’s crackdown on immigration, Trump's tariff policies and his involvement with the Jeffery Epstein investigation.
-ABC News’ Isabella Murray
Epstein Files Transparency Act bipartisan co-authors to sit next to each other at speech
Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif. -- two of the leading co-authors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act -- will sit next to each other at the State of the Union address.
This is notable because it is often rare to see Democrats and Republicans sitting together on the House floor during the State of the Union.
Khanna and Massie plan to show their support for Epstein survivors, with the Democrat inviting Epstein survivor Haley Robson as his guest to the address.
-ABC News' Lauren Peller