| DEEP RHETORICAL ANALYSIS Donald J. Trump — State of the Union Address February 2026 • 10 Rhetorical Devices • God/Devil Term Inventory • Comparative Analysis vs. 2025 SOTU – Prepared by Ph.D. Orchestrator at MarketingAgent.io & Sentiment.ws |
Overview & Contextual Frame
The 2026 State of the Union represents a significant rhetorical evolution from Trump’s February 2025 joint address. Where the 2025 speech was structured around a crisis-and-rescue narrative — inherited catastrophe, heroic intervention, promised results — the 2026 address operates in a triumphant register: the promises have been kept, the results are in, and the nation stands at the threshold of permanent golden-age destiny. This shift from aspirational to declarative oratory has profound implications for the rhetorical devices deployed, the emotional architecture constructed, and the god/devil term vocabulary mobilized.
Three contextual factors shape the 2026 speech’s distinctive character. First, the 250th anniversary of American independence functions as a master frame that mythologizes the present moment as the fulfillment of a 250-year arc. Second, the speech is longer, more discursive, and notably more informal than 2025 — featuring extended anecdotal digressions (the hockey goalie, Michael Dell’s dorm room, the $1,775-vs-$1,776 story) that signal a speaker performing relaxed confidence rather than urgent rectification. Third, the military spectacle is dramatically amplified: two Congressional Medals of Honor, a Purple Heart ceremony, and the claim of having ended eight wars elevate the speech from policy address to martial pageant.
Part I — Ten Major Rhetorical Devices
| 1. Anaphora & Tricolon | |
| Definition | Repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses (anaphora), often in groups of three (tricolon). Trump’s signature rhythmic construction. |
| Examples | • “No tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and no tax on Social Security for our great seniors” • “We are not playing games. We are not playing games.” (immediate conduplicatio variant) • “No challenge Americans cannot overcome. No frontier… No dream too bold… No horizon too distant” • “Bigger, better, brighter, bolder, and more glorious than ever before” (closing pentacolon) • “We love our military, we love our law enforcement, we love our firemen” |
| Rhetorical Effect | The tricolon structure (‘no tax on tips, overtime, Social Security’) is carried over verbatim from 2025, functioning now as a victory lap rather than a promise. The ‘no challenge / no frontier / no dream / no horizon’ sequence near the peroration is a rhetorically refined anaphoric cascade that accelerates in abstraction — moving from challenges to frontiers to dreams to horizons in a cosmic telescoping that culminates in manifest destiny. The closing pentacolon (‘bigger, better, brighter, bolder, more glorious’) is a deliberate escalation beyond the standard tricolon, creating a sense of rhetorical abundance that mirrors the speech’s abundance-of-achievement theme. |
| 2. Epideictic Spectacle & the Medal-Ceremony-as-Argument | |
| Definition | Epideictic rhetoric is the genre of praise and blame in ceremonial contexts. The 2026 speech elevates this to a new level by embedding live military award ceremonies within the address. |
| Examples | • Congressional Medal of Honor presented to CWO5 Eric Slover (Venezuela raid) — live ceremony • Congressional Medal of Honor presented to Capt. Royce Williams (Korea, age 100) — First Lady presents • Purple Heart presented to Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and family of Sarah Beckstrom • Legion of Merit presented to Coast Guard Petty Officer Scott Ruskan • West Point acceptance for Jason Hartley was 2025; here: hockey team invited, Secret Service credential given (carryover pattern) |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 speech contains more live military award ceremonies than any modern SOTU in memory. Each ceremony functions as a complete rhetorical argument in miniature: the narrative of sacrifice is told, the victim/hero is present, the award is physically bestowed, and the audience is compelled to respond emotionally. Democrats who sit during these moments are trapped — non-applause at a Medal of Honor presentation reads as disrespect for the military rather than political opposition. The ceremony-within-speech structure is the ultimate fusion of epideictic and deliberative rhetoric: it makes policy argument impossible to distinguish from patriotic ritual. |
| 3. Amplification Through Precise Numbers | |
| Definition | The rhetorical use of specific numerical data — not vague claims of magnitude but precise figures — to create an impression of verifiable, evidence-based authority. |
| Examples | • “53 all-time record highs in the stock market since the election” • “$18 trillion in new investment commitments in 12 months” vs. “less than $1 trillion in four years” • “Fentanyl flow down 56% in one year” • “Murder rate saw its single largest decline in recorded history — lowest in 125 years” • “Gasoline below $2.30… in some places $1.85 a gallon in Iowa” • “Price of eggs down 60%” / “typical mortgage annual cost down almost $5,000” • “11,888 murderers came into our country” — hyper-precise immigration statistic • “25,000 soldiers dying each month” in Ukraine • Royce Williams took “263 bullets to his plane” |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 SOTU dramatically expands the use of precise numerical claims compared to 2025’s more vague superlatives. The specificity performs scientific credibility — ‘263 bullets,’ ‘$1.85 a gallon in Iowa,’ ‘11,888 murderers’ sound measured and documented rather than rhetorical. This is an evolution of the 2025 DOGE list technique: where 2025 used enumerated absurdities ($8M for transgender mice) to generate outrage, 2026 uses enumerated achievements to generate confidence. The $18T vs. <$1T comparison is the speech’s most powerful numerical antithesis, compressed into a single parallel sentence that makes four years of prior governance look economically negligible. |
| 4. Exemplum at Scale — The Hero/Victim Density | |
| Definition | Use of specific individual stories to embody abstract policy arguments. The 2026 speech features an extraordinary density of named exempla across multiple policy domains. |
| Examples | • Megan Hemhauser — tax cut beneficiary (tips/overtime savings: $5,000+) • Catherine Rayner — drug price beneficiary (TrumpRX: $4,000 → <$500) • Raysall Wiggins — housing/Wall Street firm ban • Dalilah Coleman (age 5) — illegal alien commercial driver violence • Lizbeth Medina (16) — immigration violence; Jacqueline (mother) in gallery • Anya Zarutska & Iryna — no-cash bail repeat offender violence • Alejandra Gonzalez + Uncle Enrique — Venezuela political prisoner surprise reunion • Buddy Taggart (WWII, age 99) — 250th anniversary frame • Milly Cate McClymond + Scott Ruskan — Texas flood rescue • Sage Blair — gender transition/school policy • Sarah Beckstrom + Andrew Wolfe — DC deployment shooting • Eric Slover + Amy — Venezuela raid Medal of Honor • Royce Williams (age 100) — Korea dogfight Medal of Honor |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 SOTU contains 13+ named exempla, substantially more than the 7-8 in 2025. Three structural patterns emerge. First, the policy-reward exemplum (Megan, Catherine, Raysall) is new — these are beneficiaries, not victims, signaling the shift from grievance to triumph. Second, the live-reunion surprise (Alejandra + Uncle Enrique released from Venezuelan prison) is a theatrical escalation — the exemplum itself becomes a dramatic event rather than a static testimonial. Third, the century-spanning exempla (Buddy Taggart, Royce Williams, both age 99-100) anchors the speech in the 250th anniversary frame, constructing a living bridge between WWII heroism and the current golden age. |
| 5. Praeteritio & Self-Interrupting Digressions | |
| Definition | Praeteritio: mentioning something by claiming not to mention it. The 2026 speech also features a distinctive pattern of self-interrupting anecdotal digressions that perform informality and authenticity. |
| Examples | • Hockey goalie Connor Hellebuyck anecdote: “Did you practice that, or was that a little lucky? He refused to answer.” • Michael Dell dorm room story: “I just sat on my dorm in school and I made computers, and I’d sell ’em…” • The $1,775 vs. $1,776 warrior dividend story: “I never asked anybody if we could afford it. One more dollar.” • “I didn’t name it that. I did not name that. Nobody believes me.” (Trump Accounts) • “I’ve always wanted the Congressional Medal of Honor, but I was informed I’m not allowed to give it to myself” • Fred Trump reference: “substantially before my wonderful father… he wouldn’t like me to say that” |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 SOTU contains significantly more self-interrupting digressions than 2025 — a deliberate rhetorical strategy of performing relaxed presidential confidence. The hockey goalie joke, the Michael Dell story, and the $1,776 anecdote all function as ‘humanizing inserts’ that break the ceremonial register and signal: this president is so comfortable in power that he can afford to be informal. The ‘I didn’t name it’ protestations (Trump Accounts, TrumpRX) are a sophisticated form of praeteritio — by denying ownership of the branding, Trump draws more attention to it while distancing himself from the appearance of self-aggrandizement. The Medal of Honor quip at the close (‘I can’t give it to myself’) is epideictic self-deprecation that actually performs extreme confidence. |
| 6. Mythologization & the 250th Anniversary Frame | |
| Definition | The rhetorical construction of the present moment as the culmination of a grand historical arc. In 2026, this device is more elaborate and historically grounded than in 2025. |
| Examples | • “Two hundred and fifty years is a long time in a nation… just a mere moment in the eye of history” • Jefferson died July 4, 1826 — only one human lifespan from Declaration to now • Buddy Taggart (age 99) and Royce Williams (age 100) as living bridges across that lifespan • “13 humble colonies into the pinnacle of human civilization” — teleological arc • “The revolution that began in 1776 has not ended. It still continues.” • “When God needs a nation to work his miracles, he knows exactly who to ask” • “Our destiny is written by the hand of providence, and these first 250 years were just the beginning” |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 mythologization is more architecturally sophisticated than 2025’s. The Jefferson-to-today ‘single human lifespan’ observation is a genuine rhetorical masterstroke — by pointing out that Thomas Jefferson drew his last breath exactly 200 years before the speech (July 4, 1826), Trump collapses the temporal distance between the founding and the present into a vivid human scale. The two centenarian guests (Taggart and Williams) function as living embodiments of this temporal compression. The providential framing (‘written by the hand of providence’) elevates contemporary policy to sacred destiny, making opposition not merely wrong but cosmically misaligned. |
| 7. Antithesis & the Before/After Construction | |
| Definition | Juxtaposing contrasting states — before and after, them and us, past and present — to dramatize the magnitude of change. The 2026 speech converts the 2025 promise-antithesis into a results-antithesis. |
| Examples | • “$18 trillion in 12 months” vs. “less than $1 trillion in four years” — the speech’s sharpest antithesis • “A short time ago, we were a dead country. Now we are the hottest country anywhere in the world” • “Gasoline reached over $6 a gallon” vs. “now below $2.30… in Iowa, $1.85” • “They gave us the worst inflation in history” vs. “core inflation down to lowest in five years” • “Open borders for everyone” vs. “zero illegal aliens admitted in the past nine months” • “Maduro’s heavily protected military fortress” [thousands of soldiers, Russian/Chinese tech] vs. “overwhelmed all defenses” • Doctors gave Andrew Wolfe “almost no chance” vs. mother: “He will be okay” — and she was right |
| Rhetorical Effect | Where 2025’s antitheses were prospective (what will happen vs. what Biden did), 2026’s antitheses are retrospective (what happened vs. what we delivered). This is a rhetorically more powerful structure because it frames the speaker as vindicated rather than promising. The $18T vs. <$1T antithesis is deployed with deliberately asymmetric grammar — ‘much less than $1 trillion’ vs. ‘much more than $18 trillion’ — to make the comparison feel decisive. The ‘dead country vs. hottest country’ antithesis is hyperbolic but emotionally accessible, translating complex economic data into a stark visceral image. |
| 8. Performative Shaming & the Theatrical Address to Democrats | |
| Definition | Direct second-person address to the opposing party seated in the chamber, using their visible non-response as rhetorical material. This device is more aggressive and personalized in 2026 than 2025. |
| Examples | • “[pointing to Democrats] How do you not stand? How do you not stand?” — after Iryna’s murder story • “Ain’t that a shame. You should be ashamed of yourself, not standing up.” • “Look, nobody stands up. These people are crazy. I’m telling you: they’re crazy. Amazing. Terrible.” • “You caused that problem. You caused that problem.” — direct address to seated members on inflation • “They knew their statements were a dirty, rotten lie.” • “Democrats are destroying our country, but we’ve stopped it just in the nick of time” • “[Isn’t it funny, sick people]” — aside about Democrats not applauding war settlements |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 performative shaming is markedly more visceral than 2025. Where 2025 asked Democrats ‘for just this one night, why not join us’ (a patronizing invitation), 2026 calls them ‘crazy’ on national television and accuses them of telling ‘dirty, rotten lies.’ This escalation reflects the shift from aspirational bipartisanship performance to consolidated power confidence. The double ‘You caused that problem’ is a rare direct second-person accusation in presidential oratory — it collapses the usual third-person distance of political critique. Rhetorically, it forces the opposition into a bind: any response validates the accusation, while silence appears as guilty admission. |
| 9. Kairos — The Live Surprise Reveal | |
| Definition | Deploying information or events at the exact moment of maximum dramatic impact. The 2026 SOTU contains several kairotic ‘reveals’ that are more theatrically complex than 2025. |
| Examples | • Alejandra Gonzalez told her uncle is free — AND he walks in live during the speech • Catherine Rayner revealed as ‘the very first customer ever’ of TrumpRX • Connor Hellebuyck announced for Presidential Medal of Freedom — the team is present for the announcement • “Just four days ago, an unfortunate ruling from the United States Supreme Court” — integrating breaking news • Operation Midnight Hammer revealed as complete: “we obliterated Iran’s nuclear weapons program” • Maduro capture framed as recent covert operation success revealed to Congress |
| Rhetorical Effect | The Alejandra/Uncle Enrique reunion is the 2026 speech’s most dramatically sophisticated kairotic moment — and it significantly escalates the 2025 technique. In 2025, announcements were made to gallery guests (Jason Hartley’s West Point acceptance, D.J.’s Secret Service credential). In 2026, a family member is told of her uncle’s release, and the uncle himself walks in. This moves from announcement to live theater — the speech becomes the site of a real emotional event rather than merely describing events elsewhere. The Supreme Court tariff ruling integration is also notable: by addressing breaking legal news mid-speech, Trump demonstrates that the address responds to a living political environment rather than a static script. |
| 10. Enumeratio of Victories — The Ledger Rhetoric | |
| Definition | Systematic accumulation of claimed achievements to create an overwhelming impression of productivity and competence. In 2026 this replaces the 2025 waste-list with an achievement-list of equivalent rhetorical structure. |
| Examples | • Eight wars settled: Cambodia/Thailand, Pakistan/India, Kosovo/Serbia, Israel/Iran, Egypt/Ethiopia, Armenia/Azerbaijan, Congo/Rwanda, Gaza • Economic ledger: 53 S&P records, $18T investment, 70,000 construction jobs, oil +600K barrels/day, murders -record decline • Healthcare: TrumpRX, Most Favored Nation pricing, Great Healthcare Plan, IVF drug $4,000 → $500 • Border: zero illegal aliens admitted 9 months, fentanyl -56%, record deportations • Military: every branch at recruiting records, $1,776 warrior dividend, $1T defense budget, NATO at 5% GDP • All hostages returned from Gaza — living and dead (28/28) • Big Beautiful Bill: no tax on tips, overtime, Social Security; auto loan interest deduction; expanded child tax credit |
| Rhetorical Effect | The 2026 achievement ledger is the structural inversion of the 2025 DOGE waste list. Where 2025 used enumeratio to generate outrage (14+ absurd expenditures), 2026 uses it to generate awe (14+ world-historical achievements). Both deploy the same psychological mechanism: the accumulation effect. Individual items may be disputed, but the cumulative weight of the list overwhelms single-item skepticism. The eight wars list is particularly bold — many of these ‘wars’ are conflicts that received no coverage as settled — but presented in a rapid cascade, the audience absorbs the pattern (‘settled war after settled war’) before evaluating any individual claim. This is the rhetoric of pace as argument: the list moves too fast for critical scrutiny. |
Part II — God Terms & Devil Terms
Kenneth Burke’s concept of god and devil terms identifies the ultimate vocabulary of a rhetorical universe — words that carry near-absolute positive or negative valence and require no further justification. The 2026 SOTU’s vocabulary shows both continuity with 2025 and significant evolution: several 2025 god terms have been promoted from aspirational to declarative status, and several new god terms tied to the 250th anniversary frame have emerged. The devil term field has contracted somewhat — with Biden-era failures now treated as established history rather than contested claims — but has been supplemented with new targets (Wall Street investment firms, Somali fraud, big insurance).
| ☑ GOD TERMS | ✗ DEVIL TERMS |
| Golden Age Now declared arrived (not merely promised); functions as an eschatological god term confirming a mission accomplished frame. | Biden / Biden Administration Now primarily historical devil term — the source of all inherited problems. Less named than 2025 but still functions as the explanatory demon for prior suffering. |
| America / American The supreme identity god term — used 80+ times; attached to virtually every positive claim as an automatic legitimizing prefix. | Democrats / Every Democrat Collective devil term replacing individual blame; ‘Every single Democrat voted against’ performs tribal sorting at the group rather than personal level. |
| 250th Anniversary / 1776 New in 2026: the centennial frame confers civic-religious status on all current policies as fulfillment of the Founders’ promise. | Open Borders / Border Invasion Continuing devil term; now augmented with specific casualty statistics (11,888 murderers) to move from rhetorical to quasi-statistical. |
| Greatest / Most Powerful Superlative intensifier used reflexively across all domains — economy, military, healthcare, jobs — to signal absolute achievement. | Green New Scam Retained from 2025 with identical framing; the term now functions as shorthand for an entire worldview that requires no further definition. |
| Peace / Peace Through Strength Elevated from policy to gospel term; attached to 8 settled wars and used to pre-bless military action as inherently pacific. | Big Insurance / Obamacare New 2026 devil term complex; ‘Unaffordable Care Act’ is a deliberate renaming — the rhetorical kill-shot technique applied to healthcare. |
| Medal of Honor / Purple Heart Military honor terms weaponized as ceremonial god terms; their physical bestowal during the speech confers gravity on the surrounding policy claims. | Maduro / Iran / Hamas Foreign devil terms; each requires military or diplomatic confrontation and functions as a foil against which American strength is measured. |
| Miracle / Miraculous Theological elevation of political events; Andrew Wolfe’s survival, the Venezuela raid, hostage recoveries all become divine testimony. | Somali Pirates / Sanctuary Cities Ethnic/geographic devil terms; ‘Somali pirates who ransacked Minnesota’ fuses foreign menace with domestic corruption in a single compound image. |
| Patriots / Heroes / Warriors Continuing from 2025; now densified with specific named individuals to give the abstract term human embodiment. | Corrupt Politicians / Corrupt Partners Anti-establishment devil term; positions legislative opponents not as political adversaries but as criminal co-conspirators. |
| God / Providence / Under God Divine mandate framing intensified; ‘When God needs a nation to work his miracles, he knows exactly who to ask’ is the peak god-term construction. | Radical Left / Pro-Crime Democrats Intensified compound devil term; ‘pro-crime’ is a direct inversion of law-and-order god term, accusing opponents of actively desiring harm. |
| Freedom / Liberty Foundational republican god term; attached to the 250th frame, making any challenge to current policy an implicit attack on the Revolution. | Wall Street Investment Firms New 2026 populist devil term; large corporations buying single-family homes — unusual in that it targets financial capital rather than culture-war opponents. |
| Trump Accounts / TrumpRX New proprietary god terms; branding the administration’s name onto policy initiatives converts policy into identity loyalty artifacts. | Woke / DEI Retained from 2025 but used more briefly; now treated as a solved problem (‘we ended DEI’) rather than an active threat. |
| Drill, Baby, Drill Retained from 2025; now deployed as a proven success term rather than a promise, increasing its rhetorical weight. | Nuclear Iran / Sinister Ambitions Security devil term complex; ‘sinister ambitions’ is a Gothic vocabulary choice that elevates geopolitical threat to near-supernatural evil. |
Key evolution from 2025: The god term ‘Golden Age’ has shifted from inaugural promise to declared reality. ‘Common Sense,’ the dominant god term of 2025, is less prominent in 2026 — it has been replaced by ‘Providence’ and ‘1776’ as the speech’s higher-register legitimizing vocabulary. On the devil term side, Biden has been partially demoted from primary devil to historical devil, while ‘Democrats’ as a collective entity and ‘Iran/Maduro’ as foreign adversaries have expanded their devil term function.
Part III — Comparative Analysis: 2025 vs. 2026
Examining the two speeches together reveals a coherent two-year rhetorical strategy. The 2025 address established the moral vocabulary, villain roster, and crisis narrative. The 2026 address converts that infrastructure into a victory proclamation. This is the classic two-act rhetorical structure of populist leadership: Act I establishes the fight, Act II claims the win.
| COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS: 2025 vs. 2026 SOTU | ||
| Dimension | 2025 SOTU (Feb 2025) | 2026 SOTU (Feb 2026) |
| Primary Mode | Forensic/accusatory — establishing legitimacy vs. Biden legacy | Epideictic/triumphant — celebrating achievements, projecting destiny |
| Tone Register | Grievance + urgent promise; outsider-fighting-in | Victorious commander; incumbent surveying a won battlefield |
| Narrative Arc | Inherited catastrophe → heroic intervention → promise of results | Promised results → delivered results → permanent golden age |
| Exemplum Strategy | Victims of open borders dominate (Riley, Nungaray); pathos of injustice | Mix of heroes, survivors, and veterans; pathos of triumph and sacrifice |
| God Term Density | High — establishing moral vocabulary from scratch | Lower but more entrenched; terms now function as assumed facts |
| Devil Term Use | Biden as named devil; policies attacked aggressively | Biden referenced but diffused; ‘Democrats’ as collective devil term |
| Historical Frame | Golden Age just beginning; America needs rescue | 250th anniversary frame; America at pinnacle, destiny fulfilled |
| Humor/Informality | Moderate; some digressions (George Washington #2) | Significantly higher — hockey team anecdotes, goalie joke, Dell story |
| Superlative Density | Extreme throughout | Extreme throughout — structurally identical |
| Military Spectacle | Butler assassination narrative; Butler/patriot frame | Operation Midnight Hammer; Medal of Honor ceremonies; war-ending claims |
| Economic Claims | Promises: tax cuts, tariffs, investment to come | Results delivered: $18T investment, 53 S&P records, $2.30 gas, eggs -60% |
| Democratic Shaming | Explicit theatrical address to seated Democrats | More aggressive — pointing, ‘they’re crazy,’ ‘shame on you’ |
Part IV — Synthesis: Five Rhetorical Meta-Patterns
1. The Shift from Forensic to Epideictic Register. The most significant structural evolution between 2025 and 2026 is the genre shift. The 2025 speech was primarily forensic — it made accusations (against Biden, open borders, DEI), established guilt, and promised rectification. The 2026 speech is primarily epideictic — it praises heroes, celebrates victories, and commemorates a national milestone. This shift is rhetorically significant because epideictic oratory is inherently more crowd-pleasing and emotionally accessible. A forensic speech requires an audience to judge; an epideictic speech only requires them to feel. The 2026 address asks far less cognitive work of its audience than 2025.
2. The Confidence Escalation — Informality as Power Signal. The 2026 speech’s most striking stylistic feature is its increased informality. The hockey goalie joke, the Dell dorm room story, the Medal of Honor quip, the Fred Trump aside — these digressions would be unusual in any other SOTU. Rhetorically, they function as confidence signals: a speaker who can afford to be funny and anecdotal during the nation’s most formal annual address is a speaker who feels no pressure. This is the rhetorical performance of incumbency comfort, and it serves a persuasive function — informal command authority reads as natural leadership rather than cultivated performance.
3. The Numerical Turn — From Hyperbole to Pseudo-Precision. The 2026 SOTU represents a significant evolution in Trump’s use of numbers. Where 2025 relied primarily on superlatives (‘greatest,’ ‘most ever,’ ‘never before’), 2026 supplements them with specific numerical claims (‘56% fentanyl reduction,’ ‘263 bullets,’ ‘$18 trillion,’ ‘$1.85 gas in Iowa’). This pseudo-precision creates an impression of data-driven governance while maintaining the superlative register. The numbers are not accompanied by sources, methodologies, or confidence intervals — but their specificity produces a credibility halo that vague superlatives cannot. This is the rhetoric of authority through granularity.
4. Civic Religion and the 250th Frame. No rhetorical feature of the 2026 SOTU is more architecturally ambitious than the 250th anniversary framing. By anchoring the speech in the founding moment — using the Jefferson death coincidence, the century-old veterans, and the ‘revolution still continues’ closing — Trump positions his administration not as one government among many but as the current episode of the American founding narrative. This is theodicy-adjacent: current policies are not debatable priorities but fulfillments of providential destiny. The closing peroration (‘our destiny is written by the hand of providence’) is explicitly eschatological — it forecloses opposition by locating the current moment within a cosmic rather than merely political frame.
5. The Absent Interlocutor, Escalated. The 2025 speech addressed Democrats as a disappointed but potentially recoverable audience (‘for just this one night, join us’). The 2026 speech abandons that performance entirely. Democrats are now called ‘crazy,’ accused of ‘dirty, rotten lies,’ told ‘you caused that problem’ to their faces, and pointed at while the audience chants USA. This represents a complete inversion of the bipartisan SOTU convention — rather than performing unity, the speech performs division as a feature rather than a bug. Rhetorically, this serves Trump’s base by making Democratic discomfort visible and legible as moral failure rather than legitimate disagreement. The Democrats who remain seated during Iryna’s murder story or Sarah Beckstrom’s death become props in a morality play they cannot exit without either applauding or being filmed not applauding.
Analysis prepared for academic and research purposes • Rhetorical analysis does not constitute endorsement of content
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COMPLETE EMOTIGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF SPEECH:
The sentiment.ws emotigraphic analysis of Trump’s 2026 State of the Union reveals a speech operating at the high-energy positive quadrant of the emotional landscape — scoring +0.70 on overall sentiment, +0.80 on emotional energy, and +0.90 on confidence. This places it firmly in the “excited” register of the valence-arousal space, consistent with the rhetorical shift from the crisis-and-rescue tone of the 2025 address toward triumphant incumbency. The dominant emotional triad — gratitude (60.8%), joy (35%), and trust (31.2%) — is a notably prosocial cluster, one more associated with celebration and institutional confidence than with grievance or mobilization. Gratitude’s commanding lead is driven by the speech’s extraordinary density of acknowledgment language: “thank” appears 43 times, “honor” 10 times, and the live military award ceremonies generate sustained waves of appreciation-coded language that no other section of the speech can match in emotional volume.
The joy signal (35%) is anchored primarily in the victory-and-celebration theme complex, with “winning” appearing 5 times, “happy” 7 times, and “celebrate” 3 times — all clustering heavily in the speech’s opening economic achievement section and the Olympic hockey team sequence. The model’s identification of “humor and lightheartedness” as a five-star related theme for joy is particularly significant from a rhetorical standpoint: the goalie anecdote, the Michael Dell digression, and the $1,776 story all generate joy-coded language that softens the speech’s harder political passages and produces an emotional texture distinct from the more purely combative 2025 address. Trust (31.2%) is the third pillar, built almost entirely on promise-fulfillment language — “I kept my promise,” “we will always protect Social Security,” “that is the promise we must keep” — reflecting the speech’s structural argument that the administration’s credibility has been validated by delivered results.
What the emotigraphic profile does not foreground is equally revealing. Contempt registers at only 12% and sadness at 11%, despite the speech containing multiple graphic victim narratives (Lizbeth Medina stabbed 25 times, Iryna slashed on the train, Sarah Beckstrom shot in the head) and sustained Democratic shaming sequences. This suppression of negative emotion probability relative to what a surface reading might predict suggests that the speech’s rhetorical architecture successfully contains its dark passages within a larger positive frame — the victims are honored, the villains are being defeated, and the grief is converted into gratitude for the heroes responding to it. The model’s 5-section emotional arc would likely show gratitude and joy dominating sections 1-2 (economic wins, hockey team) and sections 4-5 (military honors, peroration), with contempt and sadness peaking briefly in section 3 (immigration victims, Democratic shaming) before being re-absorbed into the triumphant register that closes the speech. In totality, the emotigraphic signature is that of a speaker — and a speech — performing confident, validated authority rather than fighting for it.


FULL TRANSCRIPT:
Speaker Johnson, Vice President Vance, First Lady of the United States, Second Lady of the United States, members of Congress, and my fellow Americans: Our nation is back bigger, better, richer, and stronger than ever before.
Less than five months from now, our country will celebrate an epic milestone in American history: the 250th anniversary of our glorious American independence. This July 4th, we will mark two and a half centuries of liberty and triumph, progress and freedom in the most incredible and exceptional nation ever to exist on the face of the earth, and you’ve seen nothing yet. We’re going to do better and better and better. This is the golden age of America.
When I last spoke in this chamber 12 months ago, I had just inherited a nation in crisis, with a stagnant economy, inflation at record levels, a wide-open border, horrendous recruitment for military and police, rampant crime at home, and wars and chaos all over the world. But tonight, after just one year, I can say with dignity and pride that we have achieved a transformation like no one has ever seen before, and a turnaround for the ages. It is indeed a turnaround for the ages. And we will never go back to where we were just a very short time ago. We’re not going back.
Thank you. Today, our border is secure. Our spirit is restored. Inflation is plummeting. Incomes are rising fast. The roaring economy is roaring like never before. Our enemies are scared. Our military and police are stacked. And America is respected again, perhaps like never before. After four years in which millions and millions of illegal aliens poured across our borders, totally unvetted and unchecked, we now have the strongest and most secure border in American history, by far. In the past nine months, zero illegal aliens have been admitted to the United States. But we will always allow people to come in legally—people that will love our country and will work hard to maintain our country.
The flow of deadly fentanyl across our border is down by a record 56% in one year. And last year, the murder rate saw its single largest decline in recorded history. This is the biggest decline—think of it, in recorded history—the lowest number in over 125 years, year 1900. In fact, substantially before my wonderful father—I had a wonderful father, Fred—before he was born, substantially before he was born, that’s a long time ago, he wouldn’t like me to say that, but that’s a long time ago.
The Biden Administration and its allies in Congress, gave us the worst inflation in the history of our country. But in 12 months, my Administration has driven core inflation down to the lowest level in more than five years. And in the last three months of 2025, it was down to 1.7%. Gasoline, which reached a peak of over $6 a gallon in some states under my predecessor—it was quite honestly, a disaster—is now below $2.30 a gallon in most states, and in some places $1.99 a gallon. And when I visited the great state of Iowa just a few weeks ago, I even saw $1.85 a gallon for gasoline.
Mortgage rates are the lowest in four years and falling fast. And the annual cost of a typical new mortgage is down almost $5,000 just since I took office. One year. And low interest rates will solve the Biden-created housing problem, while at the same time, protecting the values of those people who already own a house that really feel rich for the first time in their lives. We want to protect those values. We want to keep those values up. We’re going to do both, and we are going to keep it that way. The stock market has set 53 all-time record highs since the election—think of that, one year—boosting pensions, 401(k)s, and retirement accounts for the millions and millions of Americans, they’re all gaining. Everybody’s up—way up. In four long years, the last Administration got less than $1 trillion in new investment in the United States. And when I say less, substantially less. In 12 months, I secured commitments for more than $18 trillion pouring in from all over the globe. Think of it: much less than $1 trillion for four years versus much more than $18 trillion for one year. What a difference a President makes.
A short time ago, we were a dead country. Now, we are the hottest country anywhere in the world. The hottest.
As thousands of new businesses are forming and factories, plants and laboratories are being built, we have added 70,000 new construction jobs in just a very short period of time. Getting bigger and bigger and stronger. Nobody can believe what they’re watching. American oil production is up by more than 600,000 barrels a day, and we just received, from our new friend and partner Venezuela, more than 80 million barrels of oil. American natural gas production is at an all-time high because I kept my promise to “drill, baby, drill.”
More Americans are working today than at any time in the history of our country. Think about that: any time in the history of our country, more working today. And 100% of all jobs created under my Administration have been in the private sector. We ended DEI in America. We cut a record number of job-killing regulations. And in one year, we have lifted 2.4 million Americans, a record, off of food stamps. And for all of these reasons, I say tonight, members of Congress, the state of our union is strong.
Our country is winning again. In fact, we’re winning so much that we really don’t know what to do about it. People are asking me, “Please, please, please, Mr. President, we’re winning too much. We can’t take it anymore. We’re not used to winning in our country until you came along. We’re just always losing, but now we’re winning too much.” And I say, “No, no, no, you’re going to win again. You’re going to win big. You’re going to win bigger than ever.” And to prove that point—to prove that point—here with us tonight is a group of winners who just made the entire nation proud: the Men’s gold-medal Olympic Hockey team, come on in.
Go ahead.
That’s the first time I’ve ever seen them get up. [laughter] And actually, not all of them did get up. But they beat a fantastic Canadian team in overtime as everybody saw, as did the American women who will soon be coming to the White House.
They were in the Oval Office before. And I just want to say a second, very big congratulations to Team USA. But I have to say that—and I told them this, and we took a vote of the team. I said, “Anybody votes no, I’m not doing it,” so they stood there and they weren’t about to say no, ’cause I’ve never seen a goaltender play as well as goalie Connor Hellebuyck.
Think of it, 46 shots on goal. And I asked him, “The one shot, the one where you put your stick in the back, and it hit the neck of your stick and bounced off. Did you practice that, or was that a little lucky? [laughter] He refused to answer that question. [laughter] But I just want to tell you that the members of this great hockey squad will be very happy to hear, based on their vote and my vote—and in this case, my vote was more important—that I will soon be presenting Connor with our highest civilian honor, which we will be given and which has been given to many athletes over the years. But when I say many, not too many, like 12, it’s called the highest civilian honor in our country, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Great athletes have gotten that—very great, the best—and I thought he deserved it. And I did take a vote, every single one of them. I said, “I’m not giving it if anybody goes no.” And every single one of them rapidly put up their hand. So I want to thank you all. What a special job you did, what special champions you are. Thank you very much.
I’m also pleased to say that the next time the Olympic torch is lit, it will be here in America for the 2028 Olympics. And it’s the summer version right in Los Angeles. We’re going to do a good job in Los Angeles.
And Los Angeles is going to be safe, just like Washington D.C. is now one of the safest cities in the country. And this year—and I must say, I got ’em both. I got ’em in my first term. And I was disappointed because I didn’t think I’d be the President when this happened. But strange things took place. And now I’ve got ’em because I got the Olympics. I got the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and I wanted to claim the 250th, but I didn’t get away with that one. I couldn’t claim that one for myself. But we’re getting the World Cup. So we have the World Cup and the Olympics coming, and that is exciting news.
So this will be a year to celebrate our country and the heroes who have kept it free. Men like Buddy Taggart. At age 17, Buddy volunteered to defend America in World War II, serving in the Pacific under the great General Douglas MacArthur. He fought bravely in the famous Battle of Manila, worked so hard; he was badly wounded and almost killed by enemy machine guns in Luzon. And 81 years ago this month, he liberated the largest internment camp in the Philippines, one of the largest anywhere in the world. But he earned many honors, including a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star, came home, started a family. And tonight he is in the gallery, looking forward to July 4th, 2026, his 100th birthday. So Buddy, you’re a brave man. And we salute you.
Even in times of challenge, setback, and immense heartache, the spirit of 1776 has always shown through very brightly. It was July 4th of last year when floodwaters tore through a girl’s summer camp in central Texas—one of the worst things I’ve ever seen, I was there—rising 26 feet in a matter of minutes, tragically claiming many, many lives. You all remember that one? As the waters threatened to sweep her away, 11-year-old Milly Cate McClymond closed her eyes and prayed to God. She thought she was going to die. Those prayers were answered when Coast Guard rescue swimmer Scott Ruskan descended from a helicopter above—nobody knew where he came from. It was Scott’s first-ever rescue mission. Young guy, but very brave. Very, very top, always top in his class. And he lifted not just Milly Cate, but 164 others to safety.
People watched Scott from a distance, and they couldn’t believe what they were seeing. The winds were blowing, the rain was pouring, everything was going. And that rapid water—nobody’s ever seen anything like it. They said, “Wow, that’s something.” Tonight, Scott and Milly Cate are here together, reunited for the very first time. Thank you, Scott, Milly Cate.
And Petty Officer Ruskan, I’m pleased to inform you that I am now awarding you the Legion of Merit for extraordinary heroism. Which is what it was: extraordinary heroism. Thank you.
And I’d like to have the military aid to please come down and take care of the service. Military aid. Thank you very much. Take care of that. Very important service. Thank you very much.
From 1776 to today, every generation of Americans has stepped forward to defend life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And they’re really doing it for the next generation. But now it’s our turn. Together, we’re building a nation where every child has the chance to reach higher and go further, where government answers to the people, not the powerful, and where the interests of hardworking American citizens are always our first and ultimate concern. That is the debt we owe to the heroes who came before us. And that is the promise we must keep to America for our 250th year.
Last year, I urged this Congress to begin the mission by passing the largest tax cuts in American history, and our Republican majorities delivered so beautifully. Thank you, Republicans. All Democrats, every single one of them, voted against these really important and very necessary massive tax cuts. They wanted large-scale tax increases to hurt the people instead. But we held strong and with the great Big, Beautiful Bill, we gave you no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and no tax on Social Security for our great seniors. And we also made interest on auto loans tax-deductible the first time, but only if the car is made in America.
Recently in Pennsylvania, I met Megan Hemhauser, a devoted mom who homeschools her children, beautiful two children, during the day while waiting tables at night, as her husband works overtime operating very heavy equipment. Megan is here this evening, and she’s happy to tell you that she is so, so much richer. Because with no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and our expanded child tax credit done again by Republicans, Megan and her husband will take home more than $5,000 extra just for the year, cutting her tax bill in more than half. Megan, please stand up. We’re fighting for you, Megan. Thank you. Thank you, Megan. We’re fighting for you, Megan.
Under our bill, parents like Megan can also activate their children’s brand-new Trump accounts. And I didn’t name it that. I did not name that. Nobody believes me, but I did not name it. It was named by a very tall man sitting right there in the third row. Nice man. A good man. Tax-free investment accounts for every American child. This is something that’s so special, and has taken off and gone through the roof. Millions will be prefunded, courtesy of the U.S. Treasury and private individuals like Michael and Susan Dell who have donated $6.25 billion to fund the Trump accounts for 25 million American children. They’re great people.
When I asked Michael Dell, “How do you make all that money?” He said, “well, I just sat on my dorm in school and I made computers, and I’d sell ’em to people. And I just kept selling and selling and selling and…” Pretty amazing story. That’s called the American Dream. He sold a lot of computers, a lot of those laptops. So I congratulate him on that. But I really thank him and Susan, as well as others like Brad Gerstner, a very tremendous guy. He was behind it right from the beginning. Brad Gerstner. Thank you, Brad. So with modest additional contributions, these young people’s accounts could grow to over $100,000 or more by the time they turn 18. Think of it, how much money is that for somebody that started with nothing? Over $100,000—could be much more than that. To make this investment in our children’s future, go to trumpaccounts.gov, trumpaccounts.gov. And a lot of people are doing it. It’s setting every record in the book. It’s popular. They knew what was going to—what it was going to take. I’m so proud of them. I’m so proud of the people that got it started, and now it’s just taken off.
One of the primary reasons for our country’s stunning economic turnaround, the biggest in history, where the Dow Jones broke 50,000 four years ahead of schedule, and the S&P hit 7,000 where it wasn’t supposed to do it for many years, were tariffs. I used these tariffs, took in hundreds of billions of dollars to make great deals for our country, both economically and on a national security basis. Everything was working well. Countries that were ripping us off for decades are now paying us hundreds of billions of dollars. They were ripping us so badly. You all know that. Everybody knows it. Even the Democrats know it. They just don’t want to say it. And yet, these countries are now happy, and so are we. We made deals. The deals are all done, and they’re happy. They’re not making money like they used to, but we’re making a lot of money. There was no inflation—tremendous growth. And the big story was how Donald Trump called the economy correctly and 22 Nobel Prize winners in economics didn’t—they got it totally wrong. They got it really wrong. And then just four days ago, an unfortunate ruling from the United States Supreme Court—it just came down. It came down. Very unfortunate ruling.
But the good news is that almost all countries and corporations want to keep the deal that they already made—right, Scott [Bessent]?—knowing that the legal power that I as President have to make a new deal could be far worse for them and therefore they will continue to work along the same successful path that we had negotiated before the Supreme Court’s unfortunate involvement. So despite the disappointing ruling, these powerful; country-saving—it’s saving our country, the kind of money we’re taking in; peace-protecting—many of the wars I settled was because of the threat of tariffs; I wouldn’t have been able to settle ’em without—will remain in place under fully-approved and tested alternative legal statutes. And they have been tested for a long time. They’re a little more complex, but they’re actually probably better, leading to a solution that will be even stronger than before. Congressional action will not be necessary. It’s already time-tested and approved. And as time goes by, I believe the tariffs paid for by foreign countries will, like in the past, substantially replace the modern-day system of income tax, taking a great financial burden off the people that I love.
Moving forward, factories, jobs, investment, and trillions and trillions of dollars will continue pouring into the United States of America because we finally have a President who puts America first. I put America first. I love America.
For decades before I came along, we had the exact opposite: from trade to healthcare, from energy to immigration, everything was stolen and rigged in order to drain the wealth out of the productive, hardworking people who make our country great, who make our country run. Under Biden and his corrupt partners in Congress and beyond, it reached a breaking point with the “Green New Scam.” Open borders for everyone. They poured in by the millions and millions from prisons, from mental institutions. They were murderers—11,888 murderers, they came into our country. You allowed that to happen. And record-setting inflation that cost the typical family $34,000 in just a speck of time. Now, the same people in this chamber who voted for those disasters, suddenly used the word “affordability,” a word. They just used it. Somebody gave it to ’em, knowing full well that they caused and created the increased prices that all of our citizens had to endure. You caused that problem. You caused that problem.
They knew their statements were a lie. They knew it. They knew their statements were a dirty, rotten lie. Their policies created the high prices. Our policies are rapidly ending them. We are doing really well. Those prices are plummeting downward. The price of eggs is down 60%. Madam Secretary, thank you. The cost of chicken, butter, fruit, hotels, automobiles, rent is lower today than when I took office by a lot. And even beef, which was very high, is starting to come down significantly. Just hold on a little while; we’re getting it down. And soon you will see numbers that few people would think were possible to achieve just a short time ago. Nobody can believe when they see the kind of numbers, and especially energy, when they see energy going down to numbers like that, they cannot believe it. It’s like another big tax cut.
I’m also confronting one of the biggest rip-offs of our times, the crushing cost of healthcare caused by you. Since the passage of the “Unaffordable Care Act” sometimes referred to as Obamacare, big insurance companies have gotten rich. It was meant for the insurance companies, not for the people. With our government giving them hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars a year, as their stock prices soared 1,000, 1,200, 1400 and even 1700% like nothing else. That’s why I introduced the Great Healthcare Plan. I want to stop all payments to big insurance companies and instead give that money directly to the people so they can buy their own healthcare, which will be better healthcare at a much lower cost.
In addition, my plan requires maximum price transparency. That’s a big deal. Sounds so simple, so big. And I did that in my first term, and the Democrats immediately terminated it with full knowledge that they were doing a very bad thing for the people. Costs were going to go way up, and that’s what happened, and now I’m bringing them way down on healthcare and everything else. I’m also ending the wildly inflated cost of prescription drugs like it’s never happened before. Other presidents tried to do it, but they never could. They tried. Most didn’t try, actually. But they tried. They said they tried. They couldn’t do it. They didn’t even come close. They were all talk and no action. But I got it done. Under my just-enacted Most-Favored Nation agreements, Americans who have, for decades, paid, by far, the highest prices of any nation anywhere in the world for prescription drugs, will now pay the lowest price anywhere in the world for drugs, anywhere. The lowest price. So in my first year of the second term—should be in my third term, but strange things happen—I took prescription drugs, a very big part of healthcare, from the highest price in the entire world to the lowest. That’s a big achievement. The result is price differences of 300, 400, 500, 600% and more, all available right now at a new website called trumprx.gov. And I didn’t name that one either, by the way.
And here tonight is the very first customer ever to get that big discount. And it is big. Catherine Rayner. For five years, she and her husband have struggled with infertility, and they turned to IVF. One drug has been costing Catherine $4,000 to purchase. But a few weeks ago, she logged onto the TrumpRX website and got that same drug that cost $4,000, got it for under $500, a reduction of much more actually than $3,500. Catherine, we are all praying for you and you’re going to be a great mom.
So now I’m calling on Congress to codify my Most-Favored Nation program into law. Now, the one thing, I’m not sure it matters because it’s gonna be very hard for somebody that comes along after me to say, “Let’s raise drug prices by 700 or 800%.” But John [Thune] and Mike [Johnson], if you don’t mind, codify it anyway. They may do it. Codify it anyway, thank you.
Many Americans are also concerned that energy demand from AI data centers could unfairly drive up their electric utility bills. Tonight, I’m pleased to announce that I have negotiated the new “ratepayer protection pledge”. You know what that is? We’re telling the major tech companies that they have the obligation to provide for their own power needs. They can build their own power plants as part of their factory, so that no one’s prices will go up. And in many cases, prices of electricity will go down for the community, and very substantially down. This is a unique strategy never used in this country before. We have an old grid. It could never handle the kind of numbers, the amount of electricity that’s needed. So I’m telling them they can build their own plant. They’re going to produce their own electricity. It will ensure the company’s ability to get electricity, while at the same time, lowering prices of electricity for you and could be very substantial. For all of you cities and towns, you’re going to see some good things happen over the next number of years.
Another pillar of the American Dream that has been under attack is home ownership. With us tonight is Raysall Wiggins, a mom of two from Houston. She placed bids on 20 homes and lost all of those bids to gigantic investment firms that bypassed inspection, paid all cash and turned those houses into rentals, stealing away her American Dream. She was devastated. Stories like this are why last month I signed [an] Executive Order to ban large Wall Street investment firms from buying up, in the thousands, single family homes. And now I’m asking Congress to make that ban permanent because homes for people, really, that’s what we want. We want homes for people, not for corporations. Corporations are doing just fine. Raysall, thank you very much. Good luck with your home. You’ll get one soon.
We’re also working to make it easier for Americans to save for retirement. And under this Administration, we will always protect Social Security and Medicare. They are not protecting it for our seniors. We will always protect Social Security. Medicare, Medicaid. Since I took office, the typical 401(k) balance is up by at least $30,000. That’s a lot of money. We have millions and millions of people because the stock market has done so well, setting all those records. Your 401(k)s are way up. Yet half of all of working Americans still did not have access to a retirement plan with matching contributions from an employer to remedy this gross disparity. I’m announcing that, next year, my Administration will give these oft-forgotten American workers, great people, the people that built our country, access to the same type of retirement plan offered to every federal worker. We will match your contribution with up to $1,000 each year as we ensure that all Americans can profit from a rising stock market. Let’s also ensure that members of Congress cannot corruptly profit from using insider information.
[to Democrats] They stood up for that. I can’t believe it. I can’t believe it. Did Nancy Pelosi stand up, f she is here? Doubt it. Pass the Stop Insider Trading Act without delay. I wasn’t sure if anybody, even on this side, was going to applaud for that. I was. I’m very impressed. Thank you. I’m very impressed.
But when it comes to the corruption that is plun— it really, it’s plundering America, there’s been no more stunning example than Minnesota where members of the Somali community have pillaged and estimated $19 billion from the American taxpayer. Oh, we have all the information. And in actuality, the number is much higher than that. And California, Massachusetts, Maine, and many other states are even worse. This is the kind of corruption that shreds the fabric of a nation. And we are working on it like you wouldn’t believe. So tonight, although started four months ago, I am officially announcing the war on fraud to be led by our great Vice President, J.D. Vance. He’ll get it done. And if we’re able to find enough of that fraud, we will actually have a balanced budget overnight. It’ll go very quickly. That’s the kind of money you’re talking about. We’ll balance our budget. The Somali pirates who ransacked Minnesota remind us that there are large parts of the world where bribery, corruption and lawlessness are the norm, not the exception. Importing these cultures through unrestricted immigration and open borders brings those problems right here to the USA. And it is the American people who pay the price in higher medical bills, car insurance rates, rent, taxes, and perhaps most importantly, crime. We will take care of this problem. We’re going to take care of this problem. We are not playing games.
Dalilah Coleman was only five years old in June 2024 when a 18-wheel tractor trailer plowed into her, stopped car traveling at 60 miles an hour or more. The driver was an illegal alien, led in by Joe Biden and given a commercial driver’s license by open-borders politicians in California. Doctors said Dalilah would never be able to walk or talk, have a good life. She wouldn’t even be able to eat again. But against all odds, she is now in the first grade, learning to walk. And she’s here this evening with her dad, Marcus, a fantastic man. Dalilah, please, you are a great inspiration. Please stand up. Thank you, Dalilah. Many, if not most illegal aliens, do not speak English and cannot read even the most basic road signs as to direction, speed, danger, or location. That’s why tonight I’m calling on Congress to pass what we will call the Dalilah Law, barring any state from granting commercial driver’s licenses to illegal aliens.
And yesterday, as you probably saw at the White House, I hosted a ceremony with Americans who lost their treasured loved ones to the scourge of illegal immigration. People came into our country—how we allowed this to happen with our open borders. These are the angel moms and families that for decades our government betrayed and our media totally ignored. Totally. It was terrible. Hard to believe, actually. In 2023, a 16-year-old high school cheerleader named Lizbeth Medina was supposed to perform in her town’s Christmas parade, but she never arrived. Her mother, Jacqueline, went home to look for her and she found her lying dead in a bathtub, bleeding profusely after being stabbed 25 times. Lizbeth’s killer was a previously arrested illegal alien who had broken in and brutally, just brutally extinguished the brightest light in her family’s life, violently and viciously. Her heartbroken mother is in the gallery to remind everyone in this chamber exactly why we are deporting illegal alien criminals from our country at record numbers. And we’re getting them the hell out of here fast. We don’t want ’em. Thank you very much, Jacqueline. Thank you.
We can never forget that many in this room not only allowed the border invasion to happen before I got involved, but indeed, they would do it all over again. If they ever had the chance. If they ever got elected, they would open up those borders to some of the worst criminals anywhere in the world. The only thing standing between Americans and a wide-open border right now is President Donald J. Trump and our great Republican patriots in Congress. Thank you.
As we speak, Democrats in this chamber have cut off all funding for the Department of Homeland Security. It’s all cut off. It’s all cut off. They have instituted another Democrat shutdown. The first one, costing us two points on GDP. Two points we lost on GDP, which probably made them quite happy, actually. Now they have closed the agency responsible for protecting Americans from terrorists and murders. Tonight I’m demanding the full and immediate restoration of all funding for the border security, homeland security of the United States, and also for helping people clean up their snow. We have no money because of the Democrats. And it would be nice. We’d love to give you a hand at cleaning it up, but you gave no money. Nobody’s getting paid. It’s a shame. So you have to think about it. We have, in case you didn’t know, pretty large snow storm out there.
One of the great things about the State of the Union is how it gives Americans the chance to see clearly what their representatives really believe. So tonight I’m inviting every legislature to join with my Administration in reaffirming a fundamental principle. If you agree with this statement, then stand up and show your support. The first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.
[to sitting Democrats] Ain’t that a shame. You should be ashamed of yourself, not standing up. You should be ashamed of yourself. That is why I’m also asking you to end deadly sanctuary cities that protect the criminals and enact serious penalties for public officials who blocked the removal of criminal aliens. In many cases, drug lords, murderers all over our country, they’re blocking the removal of these people out of our country. And you should be ashamed of yourselves.
And perhaps most importantly, I’m asking you to approve the SAVE America Act to stop illegal aliens and others who are unpermitted persons from voting in our sacred American elections. That cheating is rampant in our elections. It’s rampant. It’s very simple. All voters must show voter ID. All voters must show proof of citizenship in order to vote. And no more crooked mail-in ballots except for illness, disability, military, or travel. None. This should be an easy one. And by the way, it’s polling at 89%, including Democrats, 89%. And even the new Communist mayor of New York City—I think he’s a nice guy, actually. I speak to him a lot. Bad policy, but nice guy—just said they want people to shovel snow. They got hit hard. Wants them to shovel snow. But if you apply for that job, you need to show two original forms of ID and a Social Security card.
Yet they don’t want identification for the greatest privilege of them all: voting in America. No, it’s no good, no good. Both Republicans and Democrats overwhelmingly agree on the policy that we just enunciated. And Congress should unite and enact this common-sense country-saving legislation right now. And it should be before anything else happens.
And the reason they don’t want to do it—why would anybody not want voter ID? One reason: because they want to cheat. There’s only one reason. They make up all excuses. They say it’s racist. They come up with things. You almost say what imagination they have. They want to cheat, they have cheated. And their policy is so bad that the only way they can get elected is to cheat. And we’re gonna stop it. We have to stop it John [Thune].
And here is one more opportunity to show common sense in government. In the gallery tonight are Sage Blair and her mother, Michelle. In 2021, Sage was 14 when school officials in Virginia sought to socially transition her to a new gender, treating her as a boy and hiding it from her parents. Hard to believe, isn’t it? Before long, a confused Sage ran away from home. After she was found in a horrific situation in Maryland, a left-wing judge refused to return Sage to her parents because they did not immediately state that their daughter was their son. Sage was thrown into an all-boys state home and suffered terribly for a long time. But today, all of that is behind them because Sage is a proud and wonderful young woman with a full-ride scholarship to Liberty University. Sage and Michelle, please stand up. And thank you for your great bravery.
And who can believe that we’re even speaking about things like this? Fifteen years ago, if somebody was up here and said that, they’d say, “What’s wrong with them?” But now, we have to say it because it’s going on all over numerous states, without even telling the parents. But surely we can all agree: no state can be allowed to rip children from their parents’ arms and transition them to a new gender against the parents’ will. Who would believe that we’re talking about it? We must ban it and we must ban it immediately.
[pointing to Democrats] Look, nobody stands up. These people are crazy. I’m telling you: they’re crazy. Amazing. Terrible Boy oh boy. We’re lucky we have a country with people like this. Democrats are destroying our country, but we’ve stopped it just in the nick of time, didn’t we?
No one cares more about protecting America’s youth than our wonderful First Lady—now a movie star. She’s a movie star. Can you believe it? Who would’ve believed that? Over the past year, she has had an incredible impact championing AI legislation, advancing a landmark Executive Order on foster care, and helping secure $30 million to launch the Melania Trump Foster Youth to Independence initiative. It’s a tremendous—really, a tremendous thing that happened and had a lot of bipartisan support. She gets much better bipartisan support than I do. I get none. She gets a lot. Someday you’re going to have to tell me how you did that. And students and educators in every state have joined the First Lady’s efforts in the presidential AI challenge, keeping America’s next generation position to succeed, and strongly succeed in the future. Tonight, we welcome two young people whose lives reflect the First Lady’s impact: Sierra Burns and Everest Nevraumont. Thank you both. And Melania, thank you. I know how hard you worked on it. Thank you very much.
I’m very proud to say that during my time in office, both the first four years, and in particular this last year, there has been a tremendous renewal in religion, faith, Christianity, and belief in God. Tremendous renewal. This is especially true among young people. And a big part of that had to do with my great friend Charlie Kirk. Great guy. Great man. So last year, Charlie was violently murdered by an assassin and martyred, really martyred for his beliefs. That’s right. His wonderful wife Erika, is with us tonight. Erika, please stand. Thank you, Erika. Been through a lot. In Charlie’s memory, we must all come together to reaffirm that America is one nation under God, and we must totally reject political violence of any kind.
We love religion, and we love bringing it back. And it’s coming back at levels that nobody actually thought possible. It’s really a beautiful thing to see.
Above all, unleashing America’s promise requires keeping our community safe. We have made incredible strides, yet dangerous repeat offenders continue to be released by pro-crime Democrat politicians again and again. We are honored to be joined tonight by a woman who’s been through hell, Anya Zarutska. In 2022, she and her beautiful daughter—so beautiful, what a beautiful young woman—Iryna fled wartorn Ukraine to live with relatives near Charlotte, North Carolina. And by the way, what’s going on with Charlotte? Last summer, 23-year-old Iryna was riding home on the train when a deranged monster who had been arrested over a dozen times and was released through no-cash bail, stood up and viciously slashed a knife through her neck and body. No one will ever forget—there were people on that train—no one will ever forget the expression of terror on Iryna’s face. As she looked up at her attacker in the last seconds of her life, she died instantly. She had escaped a brutal war, only to be slain by a hardened criminal, set free to kill in America, came in through open borders. Mrs. Zarutska, tonight I promise you, we will ensure justice for your magnificent daughter Iryna.
[pointing to Democrats] How do you not stand? How do you not stand?
I’m asking this Congress to pass tough legislation to ensure that violent and dangerous repeat offenders are put behind bars, and importantly, that they stay there.
Starting last summer, I deployed our National Guard and federal law enforcement to restore law and order to our most dangerous cities, including Memphis, Tennessee—big success—New Orleans, Louisiana—big success, and our nation’s capital itself—Washington D.C., where we have almost no crime anymore in Washington D.C. How did that happen? In fact, crime in Washington is now at the lowest level ever recorded, and murders in D.C. this January were down close to 100% from a year ago.
They don’t like to hear that. One of the—Sick people.
One of the brave service members who helped achieve this stunning turnaround was 20-year-old West Virginia Army National Guard specialist, Sarah Beckstrom. After a four-month deployment, she voluntarily extended her service. And her rank was going to be lifted. She was doing so well. They were so proud of her. But the very next day, she was on patrol near the White House when she was ambushed and shot in the head by a terrorist monster from Afghanistan. Shouldn’t have been in our country. And all because she wore the uniform of our nation, she was shot. He traveled here ’cause he didn’t like people wearing our uniform. He was sick and deranged—shouldn’t have been in our country. Sarah Beckstrom died in order to defend our capital. And we are honored to be joined by her wonderful parents. Gary and Evalea, your daughter was a true American patriot, and she will be greatly missed. She was a great person. I saw reports on her. They’ve never seen anything like it. So sorry. Thank you very much. A great young lady. I saw reports that were like—perfect, she’s perfect.
Serving alongside Sarah that day was Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe. The terrorists shot Andrew in the head, and no one thought he could possibly make it. The two of them, Sarah and Andrew, both shot violently in the head. Neither was expected to make it. They weren’t even given a chance.
Except his wonderful mother, named Melody, who I spoke to the same night, and she was so positive. The doctors thought that Andrew was gone, but his mother said, “No, no, Mr. President Andrew will be fine. He’s going to make it.” I’ve never seen anything like it. I mean he was given almost no chance. She said, “I have no doubt sir. He’s going to be okay.” This was a conversation I had with her that night with her son laying helplessly in bed, blood all over. Everybody is praying. She said, “Sir, he will be okay.” The doctors didn’t understand what she was saying and after looking at the results of the damage done, neither did I. She was so strong and conclusive that even Andrew’s great father felt she didn’t really understand the gravity of the situation. But she turned out to be right. Right Melody? She turned out to be right. Amazing, actually. I said, “Where does this woman come from?” She’s the most positive person I’ve ever met. With God’s help, Andrew has battled back from the edge of death—and we’re talking about the edge of death—on his way to a miraculous recovery. He’s got a little work to do, but he’s doing great. Nice to see you. He’s a good-looking guy. Nice to see you. Thanks, Andrew. Thank you very much. So, Andrew, while you’re up now, I’m going to ask a highly respected General James Seward to present Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe and the great family of Sarah Beckstrom with the award created by our late great President George Washington himself—it’s called the Purple Heart. We love you all. Love you.
We’re proudly restoring safety for Americans at home, and we are also restoring security for Americans abroad. Our country has never been stronger. My first 10 months, I ended eight wars, including Cambodia—[to Democrats] Isn’t it funny, sick people—Cambodia and Thailand, Pakistan and India—would’ve been a nuclear war, 35 million people said the prime minister of Pakistan would’ve died if it were not for my involvement—Kosovo and Serbia, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Congo and Rwanda. And of course, the war in Gaza, which proceeds at a very low level. It’s just about there. And I want to thank Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner for your help. Thank you, Steve. Thank you, Jared. And I also want to thank the man they report to: Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Thank you, Marco. People like you. You know, Marco got 100% of the votes when he was in confirm— I think our next one was about 54%. And some of the Democrats are now saying, “I can’t believe we approved that guy.” And he said, it’s an honor that they feel that way. Right? Marco, you have done a great job. Great Secretary of State. I think he’ll go down as the best ever.
Under the ceasefire I negotiated, every single hostage, both living and dead, has been returned home. Can you believe that? Nobody thought it was possible. Nobody thought that was possible. Both living and dead. And those parents who had a dead son, their boy, they’d always told me their boy, they wanted him as much as though he were living. That was an amazing period of time. And they came back and when we got all of the living hostages back and many, many before them. But I always said, those last 20 are gonna be very tough. But we got many, many more, hundreds. But I said, those last 20 are gonna be tough. We got ’em back. But we only got back 14 or 15 of the dead of the 28. And believe it or not, Hamas worked along with Israel. And they dug, and they dug, and they dug. It’s a tough—it’s a tough thing to do. Going through bodies all over, passing up 100 bodies sometimes for each one that they found. Tough job. And they finally got it back to 27. And then Steve and Jared, they got it back to 28. They found all 28. Nobody thought that was possible, but we did it. And I remember the family of the 28th, they were so grieved, but they were so happy—as happy as it’s possible to be. They had their boy back. The mother said, “Sir, we have our boy back.” What a period of time that was. But we got ’em all back. So thank you both very much.
And we’re working very hard to end the ninth war: the killing and slaughter between Russia and Ukraine, where 25,000 soldiers are dying each and every month. Think of that: 25,000 soldiers are dying a month—a war which would’ve never happened if I were President. Would’ve never happened.
As President, I will make peace wherever I can, but I will never hesitate to confront threats to America, wherever we must. That’s why in a breakthrough operation last June, the United States military obliterated Iran’s nuclear weapons program with an attack on Iranian soil known as Operation Midnight Hammer. For decades, it had been the policy of the United States never to allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon. Many decades. Since they seized control of that proud nation 47 years ago, the regime and its murderous proxies have spread nothing but terrorism, and death, and hate. They’ve killed and maimed thousands of American service members and hundreds of thousands and even millions of people with what’s called roadside bombs. They were the kings of the roadside bomb. And we took out [Qasem] Soleimani. I did that during my first term, had a huge impact. He was the father of the roadside bomb. And just over the last couple of months, with the protests, they’ve killed, at least it looks like 32,000 protesters, 32,000 protesters, in their own country. They shot ’em and hung them. We stopped them from hanging a lot of ’em with the threat of serious violence.
But this is… some terrible people. They’ve already developed missiles that can threaten Europe and our bases overseas. And they’re working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States of America. After Midnight Hammer, they were warned to make no future attempts to rebuild their weapons program, in particular, nuclear weapons. Yet they continue, starting it all over. We wiped it out and they want to start all over again and are at this moment again, pursuing their sinister ambitions. We are in negotiations with ’em. They want to make a deal. But we haven’t heard those secret words: “We will never have a nuclear weapon.” My preference, my preference is to solve this problem through diplomacy. But one thing is certain, I will never allow the world’s number one sponsor of terror, which they are, by far, to have a nuclear weapon. Can’t let that happen.
And no nation should ever doubt America’s resolve: we have the most powerful military on earth. I rebuilt the military in my first term. We’re goin gto continue to do so. Also, we just approved a trillion-dollar budget. We have no choice. We have to be strong, ’cause hopefully we will seldom have to use this great power that we built together. It’s really called “peace through strength” that has been very, very effective. So thanks to Republican[s] in Congress, we’re investing that record number of dollars—have no choice—in the United States Armed Forces. Also creating a lot of jobs, but we’re not even doing it for that reason. ’Cause as I said, we have more jobs, more people working today than ever before in the history of our country.
And NATO countries, our friends and allies—they are, they’re our friends and they’re our allies —have just agreed at my very strong request to pay 5% of GDP for military defense rather than the 2%, which they weren’t paying. We were paying for almost all of them. Now they’re paying 5% as opposed to not paying for it. And getting that 5% was something which everyone said would never be done, could not happen. We got it really easily with one meeting and, big difference between 2% that’s not paid. We were paying the freight of many of ’em. Very few were paid up. Now 5%, then they’re paid. And everything we send over to Ukraine is sent through NATO and they pay us in full. They pay us totally in full.
Every branch of our armed forces is setting records for recruitment. This is so exciting. And every service member recently… and every servicemember recently received a warrior dividend of $1,776. You know, they put it in my desk. We got the money from tariffs and other things. A lot of money we have—we have much more money than people understand. Have to rebuild that program a little bit, but it won’t take long. But we got the money and it was $1,775. And I—they wanted my approval and I said, “What’s the number?” $1,775. I said, “Wait a minute. For one more dollar, we can have 1776. It’s going to—” I said, “We’re gonna figure that—” I never asked anybody if we could afford it. One more dollar. I said 1776. And I said, that’s good. And I’ll tell you what, our military, that was four months ago, our military, I’d never see a person in the military that doesn’t thank me for it. So we’re honored to do it. They deserve it. And, said we call it 1776. It was great. And, we love our military, we love our law enforcement, we love our firemen. You know, the firemen don’t get mentioned enough. We love our firemen.
We’re also restoring American security and dominance in the Western hemisphere, acting to secure our national interests and defend our country from violence, drugs, terrorism, and foreign interference. For years, large swaths of territory in our region, including large parts of Mexico, really large parts of Mexico, have been controlled by murderous drug cartels. That’s why I designated these cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations. And I declared illicit fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction. And with our new military campaign, we have stopped record amounts of drugs coming into our country and virtually stopped it completely coming in by water or sea. You probably noticed that. We very seriously damaged their fishing industry. Also, nobody wants to go fishing anymore. We’ve also taken down one of the most sinister cartel kingpins of all. You saw that yesterday.
In January, elite American warriors carried out one of the most complex, spectacular feats of military competence and power in world history. No one’s seen anything like it. Foreign leaders—I won’t tell you who called me—and they said “Very impressive, very good.” They couldn’t believe they all watched. They saw what happened. This is a different fighting force that we had years ago when we fought to tie. You know, it’s a great fighting force. I’m so proud of it. Look at Space Force. Space Force is my baby. ’Cause we did that, my baby. It’s becoming so important.
And America’s Armed Forces overwhelmed all defenses and not only defeated an enemy—good fighters—to end the reign of outlawed dictator Nicolás Maduro and bring him to face American justice. And this was an absolutely colossal victory for the security of the United States. And it also opens up a bright new beginning for the people of Venezuela. We’re working closely with the new president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, to unleash extraordinary economic gains for both of our countries and to bring new hope to those who have suffered so terribly. They really did suffer. With us, tonight is Alejandra Gonzalez: she grew up in a tight-knit Venezuelan family and was especially close to her beloved Uncle Enrique. But after Enrique ran for office and opposed Maduro, he was kidnapped by Maduro’s security forces and thrown into the regime’s really infamous prison in Caracas. Alejandra feared she would never see her uncle again. She feared for her own life also. But since the raid, we have worked with the new leadership, and they have ordered the closure of that vile prison and released hundreds of political prisoners already, with more to come. Alejandra, I’m pleased to inform you that not only has your uncle been released, but he’s here tonight. We brought him over to celebrate his freedom with you in person. Enrique, please come down. Thank you, Enrique. Have a good time. Nice to have you back, Enrique.
There were many heroes on that January raid to capture Maduro, really great heroes. It was very dangerous. They knew we were coming. They were all set.
But the deeds of one warrior that night will live forever in the eternal chronicles of military valor. Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover planned the mission and was the flight lead in the cockpit of the first helicopter—a big, beautiful, powerful helicopter, it was a massive Chinook carrying, as you can imagine, many, many American war fighters, wearing the dog tags his wife Amy had blessed with holy water before he left. She knew it was going to be a rough one. Eric steered the Chinook under the cover of night and descended swiftly upon Maduro’s heavily protected military fortress. This was a major military installation protected by thousands of soldiers and guarded by Russian and Chinese military technology. How did that work out? Not too good.
While preparing to land, enemy machine guns fired from every angle and Eric was hit—very badly in the leg and hip. One bullet after another. He absorbed four agonizing shots, shredding his leg into numerous pieces. And yet, despite the fact that the use of his legs was vital to successful helicopter flight—legs are the most important part of flying a helicopter—to deliver the many commandos who would capture and detain Maduro was the only thing Eric was thinking about. Then even as he was gushing blood, which was flowing back down the aisle— helicopter lands at a steep angle—the machine gun stood right in front of him. They were right in front of him, two machine gunners who escaped the wrath of the previous planes. Eric maneuvered his helicopter with all of those lives and souls to face the enemy and let his gunners eliminate the threat. Turned the helicopter around so the gunners could take care of business. Saving the lives of his fellow warriors from what could have been a catastrophic crash deep in enemy territory.
Only after safely landing the helicopter with all the warriors aboard in the exact right spot, which was vital to the mission—we probably would’ve had maybe canceled the mission if that didn’t happen—Eric told his co-pilot, also wounded, but not as gravely, to “take over, I’m about ready to pass out.” The success of the entire mission and the lives of his fellow warriors hinged on Eric’s ability to take searing pain. It was unbelievable, what’s happened to his legs, of the bullets—and keep on flying and landing and people knew what was happening. Everybody in the back of the helicopter knew, ’cause they saw the blood pouring down the aisle. Chief Warrant Officer Slover is still recovering from his serious wounds, but I’m thrilled to say that he is here tonight with his wife Amy. Eric and Amy, come on in.
So we have a surprise, Eric and Amy. In recognition of Eric’s actions above and beyond the call of duty, I would now like to ask Gen. Jonathan Braga to present Chief Warrant Officer Slover with our nation’s highest military award, the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Well, thank you very much Eric and Amy. Great to get to know you. I met with them and with a lot of their fellow warriors at Fort Bragg recently. You notice the name, Fort Bragg. We have it back. We brought it back. We won the First World War with it, the Second World War. And then they decided to change the name. But we changed it back. Everybody wanted to change back too. And 10 of Eric’s fellow warriors from that incredible night of victory will also be receiving medals at a private ceremony that will soon be held at the White House. And Eric will be there.
Thank you, Eric. That’s a big one.
Tonight, we’ve celebrated many truly extraordinary American patriots, but there is one last living legend to honor before we go. He is one more heroic American aviator: Navy fighter pilot Royce Williams served in World War IIi, Korea, Vietnam, flying more than 220 missions. In the skies over Korea 1952, Royce was in the dog fight of a lifetime—legendary dog fight—flying through blizzard conditions. His squadron was ambushed by seven Soviet fighter planes. It was his first aerial combat of the war. And despite being massively outnumbered and outgunned, Royce led the takedown of four enemy jets and almost destroyed the others, vanquishing his adversaries while taking 263 bullets to his own plane and being seriously hurt. His story was secret for over 50 years. He didn’t even want to tell his wife, but the legend grew and grew. But tonight, at 100 years old, this brave Navy captain is finally getting the recognition he deserves. He was a legend long before this evening. Royce, please stand up and I will ask the First Lady of the United States to present Capt. Royce Williams with his Congressional Medal of Honor. Thank you Royce, and thank you Eric.
I’ve always wanted the Congressional Medal of Honor, but I was informed I’m not allowed to give it to myself and I wouldn’t know why I’d be taking it, but if they ever open up that law, I will be there with you someday. But you know, that’s our highest honor: Congressional Medal of Honor. And that’s a big thing. And it’s an honor to be in the same room with you. Thank you both very much, Eric. Thank you. Thank you.
Two hundred and fifty years is a long time in the life of a nation. But in another sense, it’s really a mere moment in the eye of history. Two of the gentlemen we met in the gallery this evening took their first breaths one century ago. One hundred years before that, on July 4th, 1826, the author of the Declaration of Independence, brilliant Thomas Jefferson, drew his last breath. Just a single long human lifespan separates the giants who declared and won our independence from the heroes who stand among us tonight. Everything our nation has done, everything we have achieved, has been the work of those few great lifetimes. In those brief chapters, Americans built this nation from 13 humble colonies into the pinnacle of human civilization and human freedom, the strongest, wealthiest, most powerful, most successful nation in all of history. Americans ventured out across the daunting and dangerous continent. We carved past through an unforgiving wilderness, settled a boundless frontier, and tamed the beautiful but very, very dangerous Wild West.
From empty marshes and wide open plains, we raised up the world’s greatest cities. Together we mastered the world’s mightiest industries and shattered histories, monstrous tyrannies. And we liberated millions from the chains of fascism, communism, oppression, and terror. Americans lifted humanity into the skies on the wings of aluminum and steel. And then we launched mankind into the stars on rockets powered by sheer American will and unyielding American pride. We wired the globe with our ingenuity. We captivated the planet with American culture. And now we are pioneering the next great American breakthroughs that will change the entire world.
All of this and so much more is the enduring legacy, unmatched glory of the hardworking patriots who built and defended this country and who still carry the hopes and freedoms on all of humanity’s backs. For years, they were forgotten, betrayed, and cast aside. But that great betrayal is over, and they will never be forgotten again.
Because when the world needs courage, daring vision and inspiration, it is still turning to America. And when God needs a nation to work his miracles, he knows exactly who to ask. There is no challenge Americans cannot overcome. No frontier to have asked for us to conquer. No dream too bold for us to chase. No horizon too distant for us to claim. For our destiny is written by the hand of providence, and these first 250 years were just the beginning. From the rugged border towns of Texas to the heartland villages of Michigan, from the sun-kissed shores of Florida to the endless fields of the Dakotas, and from the historic streets of Philadelphia to right here in our nation’s capital, Washington, D.C.: the golden age of America is upon us. The revolution that began in 1776 has not ended. It still continues, because the flame of liberty and independence still burns in the heart of every American patriot. And our future will be bigger, better, brighter, bolder, and more glorious than ever before.
Thank you. God bless you. And God bless America.
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