Trump airs familiar grievances, charts MAGA plan in address before bitterly divided Congress

Sen. Elissa Slotkin delivered the Democratic response to Trump's address.

Last Updated: March 5, 2025, 12:09 AM EST

President Donald Trump addressed a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, six weeks into his historic return to the White House.

During the speech, Trump said "America is back" and defended the tariffs on key U.S. trading partners. He touched on immigration and the mineral deal with Ukraine, but neglected to go into detail on his economic plan. The speech was also met with protests and disruptions from Democrats.

Mar 04, 2025, 4:53 PM EST

Congress is a lot Trumpier today than during his first term

When Trump lays out his agenda tonight, expect nearly every Republican in the House chamber to give him a standing ovation. The heyday of anti-Trump Republicans is over, because most of Trump’s intraparty critics from his first term are no longer in Congress.

Of the 293 Republican members of the House and Senate on Jan. 20, 2017, only 121 (or 41%) are still in Congress. Some of those who left did so for normal reasons, like losing reelection or retiring due to old age. But many of them retired because they did not like the direction the party was heading in under Trump. And others, such as those who voted to impeach Trump, lost in primaries because Trump endorsed one of their challengers.

This amount of turnover was unprecedented. According to data collected by Ballotpedia and 538, more members of the president's party left the House during 2017-2020 than during any president's first term over the last 60 years.

And the Republicans who have left Congress during the Trump era were more moderate than their replacements. DW-NOMINATE is a metric that quantifies the ideology of members of Congress using their voting records, placing them on a scale from 1 (most conservative) to -1 (most liberal). The average DW-NOMINATE score of the 172 departed members was 0.480, but the average score of the 118 Republicans who were elected to Congress from 2017 to 2023 is 0.544.

In other words, Trump has succeeded at transforming congressional Republicans into a more conservative unit that is less likely to stand in his way.

—Nathaniel Rakich, 538

Mar 04, 2025, 4:40 PM EST

Who’s watching?

Is a State of the Union a speech or a campaign event? Either way, there'll be a fair bit of cheerleading going on.

That's because Americans who identify with the president's party almost always constitute a plurality or even majority of viewers, according to post-speech polling. In 26 of 27 State of the Union or similar joint addresses to Congress, more fellow party identifiers watched than people who identified with the other major party -- the one exception came in 1995, when Gallup found the same share of Democrats and Republicans took in President Bill Clinton's speech. In fact, a larger share of the audience often identifies as independent than with the opposition party, even though independents tend to be less politically engaged.

The degree to which Trump's speech will attract a more Republican-tilted audience could say something about how people are engaging -- or not engaging -- with politics at the start of Trump's second term. For Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, their first joint addresses to Congress featured especially lopsided audiences made up of viewers who predominantly hailed from their party. Yet in Trump's first term, his initial audience was not as overwhelmingly Republican -- perhaps because people were especially curious to see what a Trump speech in a formal setting would look like.

-Geoffrey Skelley, 538

Mar 04, 2025, 4:26 PM EST

AOC, Wyden plan to skip speech, host livestreams

Several prominent Democrats announced that they would not be attending Trump's speech and instead will be offering their time to constituents.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said earlier Tuesday that she would skip the speech in person, but would be posting about it on BlueSky and then doing an Instagram livestream after it was done.

Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden said he would be hosting a livestream on Facebook during the speech.

Mar 04, 2025, 4:24 PM EST

'This is theater!': CBC members say Trump's policies 'screw' Black Americans

Just hours ahead of Trump's joint address to Congress, Congressional Black Caucus lawmakers held a fiery media briefing discussing their deep concerns for Black Americans during Trump's second term.

"This is theater tonight," former CBC Chairman Rep. Steven Horsford, a Democrat, told reporters. "He wants to distract us like he's done, so that he can do one thing, and that's to screw America. And Black America is at the top of his list."

Rep. Horsford and most CBC members said they would be attending Trump's joint address to Congress, but they decried his cuts to programs that they said directly impact Black families in America.

With American Federation of Government Employees members in attendance, the CBC described this as an "unprecedented moment" in America that is harmful to Black people and Black federal workers.

- ABC News' Arthur Jones II

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