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Tag: Trump

  • Trump said he’s pro legal immigration, his policies don’t

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    During the State of the Union, President Donald Trump lauded his administration’s success in reducing the number of people trying to illegally cross the U.S. southern border as he assured that he is in favor of legal immigration.

    “In the past nine months, zero illegal aliens have been admitted to the United States,” Trump said Feb 24. “But we will always allow people to come in legally, people that will love our country and will work hard to maintain our country.”

    But Trump’s words about allowing legal immigration don’t line up with his actions.

    During the first year of his second term, Trump has terminated programs that let people legally live in the U.S., limited legal ways to get here, barred people from certain countries from entering the U.S. and paused processing of certain applications for visas and immigration statuses for legal permanent residency.

    Immigrants living in the U.S. legally have also been wrapped up in Trump’s mass deportation efforts. Spouses of U.S. citizens have been arrested while attending mandatory interviews to be granted permanent residency. People seeking legal status also have been detained during routine Immigration and Customs Enforcement check-ins and court appearances. 

    The administration’s actions “will lead to the largest restriction in legal immigration—setting aside 2020—since the 1920s,” David Bier, associate director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, wrote in December. Bier cited 2020 when the global COVID-19 pandemic restricted migration.

    Here’s a sampling of how the Trump administration has restricted legal immigration.

    Ended temporary programs for people legally in the U.S.

    Former President Joe Biden had significantly expanded the use of humanitarian parole, a way that people can come into the U.S. legally to temporarily live and work. Trump revoked the two programs that let people receive humanitarian parole and stripped the protections from people who entered that way.

    As part of this, he ended the CBP One app that let people make appointments at official ports of entry to begin requesting asylum and canceled 30,000 pending appointments. Under U.S. law, people are allowed to apply for asylum if they fear persecution in their home countries. To apply, people must be on U.S. soil.  

    The Department of Homeland Security has also tried to end several countries’ Temporary Protected Status, which allows people from certain countries experiencing war, environmental disasters and epidemics to temporarily live and work in the U.S. Several terminations are being challenged in court and are paused while the cases are pending.

    A federal judge on Feb. 2 temporarily blocked TPS termination for Haiti saying it “seems substantially likely” that the administration decided to terminate TPS “because of hostility to nonwhite immigrants.”

    Ending humanitarian parole and TPS could affect about 2.5 million people currently legally in the U.S., Bier wrote.

    Implemented travel bans, stopped processing applications for people from certain countries

    As he did during his first term, Trump has implemented a travel ban on several countries including Haiti, Afghanistan and Somalia. The ban restricts people from 19 countries from getting temporary visas, such as for tourism and education, and restricts people from seven of the countries from staying permanently for work.

    “Over the next three years, 400,000 legal immigrants and nearly 1 million tourists, business travelers, international students, foreign workers, and other temporary visitors will face this ban,” according to a Cato Institute analysis.

    Alongside the travel ban, the State Department on Jan. 21 paused issuing non-tourist visas for people from 75 countries. And U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has paused processing immigration applications from 39 countries, including for asylum, permanent residency and citizenship.

    Nearly half of the world’s countries, more than 90, have some form of immigration restriction.

    Dismantled U.S. refugee program

    One of the limited ways people can legally migrate to the U.S. is through the refugee program. 

    Refugees, as defined by U.S. law, are people outside of the U.S. who fled their home countries because of persecution related to race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group. 

    Trump has nearly entirely halted the U.S. refugee program. On his first day in office, he enacted an indefinite pause on refugee resettlement. In the weeks that followed, he canceled travel for people who had already been granted the status. 

    From February 2025 to October 2025, the Trump administration resettled 506 refugees, a majority of whom were white South Africans, according to the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute. Trump has repeated the unfounded claim that white South Africans are the target of a genocide. 

    Trump set the fiscal year 2026 refugee resettlement cap at 7,500, a record low.  In fiscal year 2024, Biden’s last year in office, the U.S. resettled 100,000 refugees. ​

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  • From ‘Drop Dead’ to ‘Let’s Build’: Mamdani pitches Queens housing development to Trump during surprise Washington trip | amNewYork

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    Mayor Zohran Mamdani said Thursday that his unannounced meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office was productive and expressed optimism about his pitch to build 12,000 units of affordable housing at Sunnyside Yards in Queens with the president’s support.

    In a photo posted following the meeting, Trump is seen holding two front pages of the Daily News. One is from 1975, when then‑President Gerald Ford famously told New York City to “drop dead” (as the tabloid put it) after City Hall requested an emergency loan to prevent bankruptcy. The other is a mock-up with the headline, “Trump to City: Let’s Build,” with a subheading noting, “Trump delivers 12,000 homes.”

    “I had a productive meeting with President Trump this afternoon. I’m looking forward to building more housing in New York City,” Mamdani wrote in the post directly after the visit. 

    Mamdani’s Press Secretary Joe Calvello said Thursday evening that the mayor presented Trump with the mock-up front pages as he pitched “a project with an estimated 12,000 units.” 

    “The president was very enthusiastic about the idea that we pitched him,” said Calvello. 

    He said that during Mamdani’s last in-person meeting with the President, Trump asked him to come back with “some big ideas on how we can build things together here in New York City, and that’s what he did today.”

    “The mayor took him up on his offer and went to DC today to pitch him about a possible project in NYC that could deliver one of the biggest federal investments in housing of the past 50 years,” said Calvello.

    In a statement issued late Thursday, the mayor’s office confirmed that the city is seeking $21 billion in federal grants to begin construction on the long-stalled, ambitious plan to build above the Sunnyside Yards. 

    In 2015, then-Mayor Bill de Blasio first suggested building on the site. In 2020, the city and Amtrak, the federal agency that owns the majority of the site, released a long-awaited ‘Sunnyside Yard Master Plan.’ 

    The master plan called for the creation of 100 percent affordable housing with 12,000 homes, 60 acres of new open space, equitable home ownership opportunities, the long-sought Sunnyside Station, and necessary infrastructure and other public amenities.

    At the time of the master plan’s release, the city’s Economic Development Corporation said the “generational plan” would likely be rolled out over several decades and involves decking over 115 acres of the 180-acre Sunnyside Yard. At the time, the estimated cost to build the deck would be about $5.4 billion– with the total cost of the platform and infrastructure about $14.4 billion. It then stalled under the Adams administration. 

    If the grants sought by the mayor are approved, Mamdani’s office said it would pave the way for the construction of those affordable homes, including 6,000 new Mitchell-Lama-style homes which were also outlined in the plan that was shaped by a series of public workshops and meetings held between May 2018 and the end of 2019. The project, city officials said, would create 30,000 union jobs and deliver new parks, schools, and health care clinics on the site. 

    “New York City is facing a generational affordability challenge,” Mayor Mamdani said. “Working families are being priced out of the neighborhoods they built. To meet this moment, we need a true federal partner prepared to invest boldly and act urgently. I appreciated the opportunity to speak directly with President Trump about building more housing in any single project than our city has seen since 1973.”

    According to the city, the Trump administration agreed to “continue discussions in the weeks ahead.”

    The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Plea to release students in ICE detention

    Also during Thursday’s meeting, Mamdani made a direct appeal to President Trump and secured the release of the Columbia University student who was arrested by ICE agents in her dorm building earlier that morning. The federal officers allegedly said they were NYPD officers looking for a missing child in order to gain access to the building of Elaina Aghayeva, a Columbia School of General Studies senior.

    Mamdani said he received a phone call from Trump after leaving the meeting, and “he has just informed me that she will be released imminently.” Aghayeva later posted on her Instagram story at around 3:45 p.m. that she had been released.

    Press Secretary Calvello said that after raising Aghayeva’s case, the mayor also gave Trump’s Chief of Staff, Susie Wiles, a list of four NYC students in ICE custody, asking them to consider dismissing their cases as well. 

    The mayor made the unannounced trip to Washington, D.C. on Thursday morning for a meeting with President Trump, the second in-person meeting between the two leaders whose relationship has drawn national attention.

    Mamdani’s visit was not listed on his public schedule and was first reported by The New York Times on Thursday morning. A source familiar with the meeting confirmed the mayor’s presence in the nation’s capital to amNewYork, but did not initially disclose the agenda.

    It comes nearly three months after the two held an unexpectedly cordial Oval Office discussion in November, when then-Mayor-elect Mamdani traveled to the White House. During that visit, they discussed shared concerns about housing affordability, public safety, and the cost of living.

    At the earlier November meeting, Trump praised Mamdani’s leadership potential and suggested a willingness to support initiatives to improve conditions in the city, even as both men acknowledged significant policy disagreements.

    U.S. President Donald Trump and then-New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani react as they speak to members of the media in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 21, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan ErnstREUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

    The 34-year-old mayor, a democratic socialist who took office in January, has repeatedly drawn sharp criticism from Trump, who during the 2025 mayoral campaign labeled him a “communist” — a false characterization, but the President has continued to use it. During the election, the president repeatedly threatened to cut off federal funding to the city if Mamdani were to win.

    In turn, Mamdani previously called Trump’s approach to governance authoritarian and fascist, and his election victory speech vowed to push back against the president’s threats to defund the city and meddle in his administration. Since taking office, however, the mayor has toned down his campaign criticism of the president as he seeks to foster a good relationship with the federal government. 

    The pair have kept in constant contact since their initial meeting, and when asked about the content of their conversations, Mamdani has kept the content and frequency of those conversations closely under wraps.

    Asked about it on Wednesday, after Trump shouted him out during his State of the Union address, Mamdani said: “I’ll keep the conversations that I have with the president private. I will tell you, however, that whenever they do happen, they always focus on how to better our city.”

     

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    Adam Daly

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  • Trump defends immigration crackdown at State of Union as approval ratings plummet

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    To defend an increasingly unpopular immigration crackdown during his State of the Union speech, President Trump highlighted the victims of crimes perpetuated by undocumented immigrants.

    But as Democrats pointed out, the president’s lengthy speech made no reference to the U.S. citizens, including Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, who were killed by immigration agents.

    Recent polls show public approval of Trump’s immigration policies has fallen to record lows level since he returned to the White House. One poll, released Feb. 17 by Reuters and the market research firm Ipsos, showed just 38% of respondents felt Trump was doing a good job on immigration.

    Another poll, published last month by Fox News, showed 59% of voters say U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is “too aggressive.”

    “As President Trump brags about his immigration enforcement at tonight’s State of the Union, I can think only of Renee Nicole Good, Alex Pretti and the three dozen people who have died in ICE custody since Trump took office,” Rep. Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) wrote on X.

    Within the first few minutes of his address on Tuesday night, Trump highlighted “the strongest and most secure border in American history, by far.” He also offered — at least momentarily — a softer tone, adding that “We will always allow people to come in legally, people that will love our country and will work hard to maintain our country.”

    In reality, the administration has restricted legal immigration. It has revoked humanitarian benefits for hundreds of thousands of people, and placed an indefinite pause on all asylum applications filed with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

    Guests invited by various lawmakers to attend Trump’s speech offered dueling visions of the administration’s mass deportation effort.

    Rep. Randy Feenstra (R-Iowa) said he would bring the father and brother of Sarah Root, who was killed in 2016 after a drunk driver, who was in the U.S. illegally, crashed into her vehicle. Trump held an event Monday for “angel families,” those with a relative who was killed by an undocumented immigrant, and signed a proclamation honoring such victims of crimes.

    Democrats, meanwhile, invited immigrants, family members of those detained or deported, and U.S. citizens who were violently arrested by immigration agents.

    Rep. Mike Levin (D-San Juan Capistrano), for example, said he was bringing the daughter of a Laguna Niguel couple deported last year to Colombia after their arrest during a routine check-in with ICE. And Rep. Jesus Garcia (D-Ill.) invited Marimar Martinez, a Chicago woman shot five times by Border Patrol Agent Charles Exum.

    On X, the Department of Homeland Security shot back at Democrats with immigrant guests, saying the lawmakers are “once again prioritizing illegal aliens above the safety of American citizens.”

    On Tuesday morning, Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.) held a news conference on “the state of immigration,” flanked by Christian pastors, in which she touted her Dignity Act, which would provide permanent legal status to immigrants who meet certain benchmarks.

    “Throughout the Scripture, there are two kinds of leaders: those who persecute faith communities and those who protect them,” she said.

    California Sen. Adam Schiff was among the Democrats to boycott Trump’s speech, and he cited immigration enforcement as one reason for his absence.

    “I have not missed the State of the Union in the 25 years I’ve been in Congress, but we have never had a president violate the Constitution, the laws every day with seeming impunity,” Schiff told Meidas Touch outside the Capitol. “We’ve never had masked armed, poorly trained agents, victimizing our cities, demanding to see people’s papers.”

    Trump repeated claims about immigration that have been debunked, such as his assertion that President Biden’s immigration polices allowed millions of people to pour into the U.S. from prisons and mental institutions.

    Trump also highlighted a figure he has often turned to — that Democrats let in “11,888 murderers.” That number, an inaccurate description of federal data, refers to immigrants who, over the course of decades (including the first Trump administration) were convicted of homicide, usually after their arrival in the U.S. Those immigrants are listed on ICE’s “non-detained docket” typically because they are currently serving their prison sentences.

    Turning to Minnesota, Trump said Somalis have defrauded $19 billion from American taxpayers — a disputed figure — and referred to them derogatorily as “Somali pirates.”

    Trump went beyond Somalis to disparage many immigrants, saying “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,” he said.

    Trump also highlighted the case of Dalilah Coleman, 6, of Bakersfield who was left with a traumatic brain injury after a 2024 car crash in California.

    He called on Congress to pass the Dalilah Law, which would bar states from granting commercial drivers licenses to immigrants without lawful status. He said, without proof, that “most illegal aliens do not speak English and cannot read even the most basic road signs.”

    A year after Dalilah’s accident her family met with Partap Singh, the detained Indian immigrant responsible for the crash, at the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Center in Bakersfield. Marcus Coleman, her father, told Fox26 News that the focus shouldn’t be on Singh’s legal status because similar accidents happen every day.

    Also present Tuesday night were the parents of Sarah Beckstrom, the West Virginia National Guard member shot and killed in Washington, D.C. by an Afghan immigrant, as well as Andrew Wolfe, who was also shot and survived.

    Trump awarded Wolfe and Beckstrom the Purple Heart. He called Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the man charged in the shooting, a “terrorist monster.” Lakanwal legally entered the U.S. from Afghanistan through a Biden administration program in 2021 and his asylum application was approved under the Trump administration last April.

    Turning his attention the fall’s midterm elections, Trump warned his supporters that if allowed back into power, Democrats would reopen the borders “to some of the worst criminals anywhere in the world.”

    Trump then invited legislators to stand if they agreed with him that “the first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.”

    Republicans stood, offering one of the longest standing ovations of the night. Democrats remained seated.

    Trump told Democrats they should be ashamed for not standing up.

    “You have killed Americans!” Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) yelled from the audience. “You should be ashamed.”

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    Andrea Castillo

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  • Trump uses longest-ever State of the Union to try to convince voters that US is ‘winning so much’

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    President Donald Trump declared during a marathon State of the Union on Tuesday that “we’re winning so much” — insisting he’d sparked an economic boom at home and imposed a new world order abroad in hopes it can counter his sliding approval ratings.We fact-checked the State of the Union address with Hearst Television’s National Investigative Unit and our partners at PolitiFact. To follow along with live updates, click here. Trump’s main objective was convincing increasingly wary Americans that the economy is stronger than many believe, and that they should vote for more of the same by backing Republicans during November’s midterm elections. In all, Trump spoke for a record 108 minutes, breaking — by eight minutes — the previous time mark from his address before a joint session of Congress last year.The president largely avoided his usual bombast, only occasionally veering off-script — mostly to slam Democrats. As he did during such addresses in his first term, Trump relied on a series of surprise special guests to dramatically punctuate his message. They included U.S. military heroes and a former political prisoner released after U.S. forces toppled Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.Video below: See Trump’s full speech Trump drew some of the loudest applause of the night when he invited the Olympic gold medal-winning U.S. men’s hockey team into the House chamber.“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, Mister President, we’re winning too much. We can’t take it anymore,’” Trump said before introducing the team.The hockey players, wearing their medals and “USA” sweaters, drew a bipartisan standing ovation. Trump pointed to the Democratic side of the chamber and quipped, “That’s the first time I ever I’ve ever seen them get up.”In a made-for-TV moment, the president announced he would be awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor, to the hockey team’s goaltender, Connor Hellebuyck. He also bestowed the Purple Heart on Andrew Wolfe — a National Guard member who was shot while deployed on the streets of the nation’s capital. Wolfe made his first public appearance since then during the speech.That scene recalled a similar surprise announcement in 2020, when Trump gave the Medal of Freedom to conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh during his State of the Union speech. Video below: Fact-checking President Trump’s State of the Union addressTrump decries tariff decision as justices look onThe president championed his immigration crackdowns and his push to preserve widespread tariffs that the Supreme Court just struck down. He drew applause only from Democrats while describing the high court’s decision, which he called “an unfortunate ruling.”Trump vowed to plow ahead, using “alternative” laws to impose the taxes on imports and telling lawmakers, “Congressional action will not be necessary.” Trump argued that the tariffs are paid by foreign countries, despite evidence that the costs are borne by American consumers and businesses. “It’s saving our country,” he said.The only Supreme Court justices attending were Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kagan. Trump greeted them personally before the speech, despite last week slamming Coney Barrett — who he appointed to the high court in his first term — for siding with the majority against his tariffs.Democrats also stood for Trump vowing to halt insider trading by members of Congress. But Rep. Mark Takano, a California Democrat, yelled, “How about you first!” Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan Democrat, called out, “You’re the most corrupt president!”When some heckling continued, Trump proclaimed, “You should be ashamed of yourselves.” Later, he pointed at Democrats and proclaimed, “These people are crazy.”Democratic Rep. Al Green was escorted from the chamber early in the speech, after he unfurled a sign of protest that read “Black People Aren’t Apes!” That was an apparent reference to a racist video the president posted that depicted former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama as primates in a jungle. Green was also removed during Trump’s address last year.The president, meanwhile, was mostly optimistic and patriotic, but Trump struck a darker tone in large swaths of his speech to warn about the dangers posed by immigrants. He invited lawmakers from both parties to “protect American citizens, not illegal aliens” and championed proposals to limit mail-in ballots and tighten voter identification rules.Affordability gets relatively little timeTrump didn’t dwell on efforts to lower the cost of living — despite polling showing that his handling of the economy and kitchen-table issues has increasingly become a liability. Such concerns about the high costs of living helped propel Democratic wins around the country on Election Day last November.There also are persistent fears that tariffs stoking higher prices could eventually hurt the economy and job creation. Economic growth slowed in the last three months of last year.It is potentially politically perilous ahead of November elections that could deliver congressional wins to Democrats, just as 2018’s blue wave created a strong check to his administration during his first term.On Tuesday, Trump blamed his predecessor, former President Joe Biden, along with Democratic lawmakers in the chamber, saying they were responsible for rising prices and health care costs, two issues his political opponents have repeatedly raised against him.“You caused that problem,” Trump said of affordability concerns. He added a moment later, “They knew their statements were a dirty, rotten lie.”Trump also said he’d press tech companies involved in artificial intelligence to pay higher electricity rates in areas where their data centers are located. Such data centers tend to use large volumes of electricity, potentially increasing the cost of power to other consumers in the area.Another notable off-script moment came as Trump was referencing prescription drug prices, saying, “So in my first year of the second term — should be my third term — but strange things happen,” prompting at least one chant in the chamber of “Four more years!”Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger, who delivered the Democratic response to Trump’s speech, slammed the president’s aggressive immigration policies, his widespread cuts to the federal government and his tariffs.“Even though the Supreme Court struck these tariffs down four days ago, the damage to us, the American people, has already been done. Meanwhile, the president is planning for new tariffs,” she said. “Another massive tax hike on you and your family.”A warning to IranTrump’s address came as two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran. Trump said, “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,” he added.The president also recounted U.S. airstrikes last summer that pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and lauded the raid that ousted Maduro in Venezuela — as well as his administration’s brokering of a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.“As president, I will make peace wherever I can,” Trump said. “But I will never hesitate to confront threats to America, wherever we must.”Here’s a look at more of the night’s events:Trump makes scant mention of immigration, long a favorite issueImmigration helped carry Trump to victory in 2024 and it has long been a signature issue for him, but he barely discussed the aggressive and highly consequential steps he took to reshape the immigration system during his fist year in office.He didn’t talk about key initiatives under his $170-billion immigration enforcement package that Congress approved: vastly expanding immigration detention, doubling the size of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and building more border wall. He didn’t talk about major policy changes like attempting to end birthright citizenship, denying bond to people who are in immigration custody, suspending asylum at the border and revoking legal status for hundreds of thousands of people who are in the United States on humanitarian grounds.And he didn’t discuss his mass deportation campaign — just weeks after Minnesota’s largest cities turned into battlegrounds between immigration officers and protesters and resulted in U.S. officials fatally shooting two U.S. citizens.Video below — “You should be ashamed”: President Trump, Democrats get into shouting match during big moment of State of the UnionSpanberger calls immigration crackdown a drain on law enforcementThe flood of immigration agents into cities like Minneapolis is unnecessary, wasteful and spreads fear, Spanberger said.“Every minute spent sowing fear is a minute not spent investigating murders, crimes against children, or the criminals defrauding seniors of their life savings,” she said. “Our broken immigration system is something to be fixed, not an excuse for unaccountable agents to terrorize our communities.”Video below: See the full 2026 Democratic SOTU responseSpanberger slams ‘poorly trained’ immigration officers“Our president has sent poorly trained federal agents into our cities, where they have arrested and detained American citizens and people who aspire to be Americans.”Spanberger is criticizing how Trump’s mass deportation agenda is being carried out in places like Chicago and Minneapolis.Her comments come just a day after a whistleblower told Congress about how new ICE recruits are being trained and the problems with that training.Ryan Schwank accused the Department of Homeland Security of dismantling the training program for new deportation officers and lying about what they were doing.DHS has said that there’s been no compromise or corner cutting when it comes to preparing new deportation officers.Spanberger poses questions about Trump’s second term in Democratic rebuttal“Is the president working to make life more affordable for you and your family? We all know the answer is no”Throughout her Democratic response to Trump’s address, Spanberger posed a series of questions to Americans, asking whether they feel life has improved since he returned to office.The Democrat, who flipped a Republican-held office last year, is hoping voters across the country will share that assessment when they head to the polls in November.Spanberger takes on affordability message in Democratic response to TrumpSpanberger is arguing in her Democratic rebuttal that costs remain high for many Americans more than a year into his second term.Her message, that families are still struggling under Trump’s policies, is one Democrats plan to carry nationwide ahead of the midterm elections. Party leaders point to Spanberger’s double-digit victory in Virginia last November as validation of a disciplined, cost-focused campaign they now hope to replicate across the country.Virginia governor delivers Democratic responseVirginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger is giving the Democratic Party’s response following Trump’s speech. California Sen. Alex Padilla, who made national headlines last year after being forced to the ground and handcuffed by federal agents, will deliver the party’s response in Spanish.Lawmakers leap to their feet with starkly divided responses as Trump concludes his addressRepublicans gave the president their final standing ovation of the night as he concluded his remarks. GOP lawmakers then proceeded to mingle in the chamber. Some walked up to congratulate the president on the celebratory mood in the chamber.Democrats also immediately leapt to their feet, though with no fanfare. The caucus almost immediately turned and streamed out of the chamber without applause. Some could be seen scoffing and shaking their heads shortly after Trump wrapped his remarks and descended from the House dais.A warning to IranTrump’s address came as two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran. Trump said, “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,” he added.The president also recounted U.S. airstrikes last summer that pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and lauded the raid that ousted Maduro in Venezuela — as well as his administration’s brokering of a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.Less mentioned was Trump’s having strained U.S. military alliances with NATO, thanks to his push to seize Greenland from Denmark and his failure to take a harder line with Russian President Vladimir Putin in seeking an end to its war in Ukraine. Tuesday marked the fourth anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war.First lady presents Medal of Honor to 100-year-old veteranTrump asked First Lady Melania Trump to present Royce Williams a Medal of Honor for his actions in a secret mission during the Korean War.A military aide was seen bringing the esteemed award down the stairs of the House gallery where Melania Trump and Williams were sitting before she put it around his neck while a standing ovation took over the chamber.“He didn’t even want to tell his wife. But the legend grew and grew,” Trump said about the clandestine mission. “But tonight, at 100 years old, this brave Navy captain is finally getting the recognition he deserves.” Another victory lap on Maduro and focus on Western HemisphereTrump again celebrated last month’s capture of the Venezuelan leader in an audacious military operation, saying the U.S. “just received from our new friend and partner, Venezuela, more than 80 million barrels of oil.” The Trump administration had previously said it was orchestrating the effort to sell a total of about 30 to 50 million barrels of Venezuelan oil that had been stranded by a partial blockade imposed by the administration.Trump paid tribute to a helicopter pilot who was wounded in the operation but still managed to carry out the mission and paused to award him the Congressional Medal of Honor.He also introduced a former political prisoner, Enrique Márquez, who was freed by the Venezuelan government last month following the U.S. operation. He was a presidential candidate in the 2024 election and a former member of the National Electoral Council.“This was an absolutely colossal victory for the security of the United States,” Trump boasted.Trump’s action against Maduro, coupled with an increasingly aggressive posture in the Western Hemisphere aimed at eliminating drug trafficking and illegal migration, are a concern for many in the region — although they also have won support from some smaller countries.Trump has likened the strategy to the Monroe Doctrine, with its rejection of outside influences and assertion of U.S. primacy throughout what the administration considers to be “America’s backyard.”U.S. forces, under Trump’s orders, have carried out dozens of military strikes on alleged drug-running vessels in the Caribbean, seized sanctioned oil tankers and tightened the embargo of Cuba as part of what the president is referring to as the “Donroe Doctrine.””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,” Trump said.Record broken for longest SOTU speechTrump’s 108-minute speech broke his own record for the longest presidential address to Congress.The prior record was his own 100-minute speech last year to a joint session of Congress. A president’s first-year address to Congress is not technically considered a State of the Union.Before 2025, President Bill Clinton had the record with speeches clocking in at 89 minutes in 2000 and 85 minutes in 1995.On Monday, the president warned ahead of giving the address that the State of the Union would be long, saying, “I’m making a speech tomorrow night, and you’ll be hearing me say that,” he said. “I mean, it’s going to be a long speech because we have so much to talk about.”National Guard members shot in Washington honoredPresident Donald Trump presented the Purple Heart medal during his State of the Union Address and honored two National Guard members who were shot while patrolling in Washington last year. Trump paused his speech on Tuesday so a military officer could pin the medal on Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe in the House gallery. He also honored Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, who died from her injuries, as “a true American patriot” and introduced her parents. Wolfe and Beckstrom, members of the West Virginia National Guard, were ambushed in November while deployed to Washington as part of Trump’s executive order to battle what he said was rampant crime.Trump mentions killing of Mexican drug lordTrump appeared to reference the killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, better known as “El Mencho.”The Mexican army killed Oseguera Cervantes Sunday in an attempt to capture him in the western state of Jalisco. Both Mexico and the United States confirmed that there was U.S. intelligence support for the operation.Trump said, “We’ve also taken down one of the most sinister cartel kingpins of all. You saw that yesterday.”Some 70 people died in the operation and violence that erupted after it.Trump touts shaky ceasefire deal in GazaAmong the several conflicts he claims to have ended, Trump mentioned the ongoing, fragile ceasefire deal in Gaza. “I negotiated every single hostage, both living and dead, has been returned home. Can you believe that? Nobody thought it was possible,” the president said during his speech. While the U.S.-brokered deal between Israel and Hamas has halted major military operations, freed the last hostages held by Hamas and ramped up aid deliveries to Gaza, a lasting resolution to the two-year war ignited by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack into Israel remains elusive.Trump says Homeland Security shutdown is impacting snow cleanup“We’d love to give you a hand at cleaning it up, but you gave no money. Nobody’s getting paid.”Trump said the DHS shutdown was preventing the federal government from “helping people clean up their snow,” referring to the massive snowstorm that impacted much of the northeastern U.S. this week.The Federal Emergency Management Agency, housed under DHS, rarely helps states with snow cleanup, except in some instances of record snowfall or near-record snowfall, or when an ice storm causes catastrophic damage. States first request a disaster declaration that the president must approve.A government shutdown also doesn’t necessarily stop FEMA disaster response: The more than 10,000 staff who make up the bulk of FEMA’s disaster response and recovery force continue to work and be paid during a government shutdown, and disaster spending can continue for as long as the agency’s non-lapsing Disaster Relief Fund has money.Trump highlights case of Ukrainian woman killed on North Carolina train“We will ensure justice for your magnificent daughter, Iryna.”Among those in the audience was the mother of 23-year-old Iryna Zarutska, an Ukrainian refugee who was fatally stabbed by a man on a North Carolina commuter train last August.Her killing captured on camera in Charlotte sparked intense criticism over why the suspect, Decarlos Brown Jr., was on the street despite 14 prior criminal arrests.The Trump administration has pointed to the killing to argue that local leaders, judges and policies in Democratic-led cities are failing to protect their residents from violent crime.Brown has been charged with a federal crime that could carry the death penalty.Erika Kirk recognizedErika Kirk, the widow of influential conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated this past fall, was recognized during President Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday. The president also called for an end to political violence.Trump talks about recent SCOTUS ruling on tariffsTrump drew applause only from Democrats while describing the Supreme Court’s ruling last week, striking down many of his signature tariff policies. The president called it “an unfortunate ruling” and said “everything was working well” before the court’s decision.But Trump said he would plow ahead, using “alternative” laws to impose the taxes on imports and telling lawmakers, “Congressional action will not be necessary.”He also made a bold prediction, suggesting that someday tariffs would “substantially replace” the modern income tax system. He claimed the tariffs are paid by foreign countries despite evidence that the costs are borne by American consumers and businesses.“It’s saving our country,” Trump said of tariffs, adding that they were “peace-protecting.”The Supreme Court justices in attendance were the same who came to Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress last March: Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kagan. Trump greeted the justices and even shook handswith Coney Barrett, after previously slamming her for siding with the majority against Trump’s tariffs — despite him appointing her to the high court in his first term.Trump tells Democrats they’re responsible for high costs“You caused that problem.”Trump directly addressed Democrats, blaming them for the high costs that are troubling voters. This has been a major theme of Trump’s speech tonight and is also an argument he makes frequently when talking about the economy.Recent polling shows rising frustration with Trump’s approach to the economy.He went on to directly blame Democrats for health care costs, a problem he told them is “caused by you.” He cited the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama’s health care law that Republicans have tried and failed to repeal.Trump touts his health care proposal, which hasn’t made headway in Congress yet“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 health care.”Trump is referring to a health care proposal he pitched to congressional Republicans in January, in hopes that they would turn it into legislation to make health care more affordable. No such legislation has gotten enough momentum to pass yet.His pitch, a general outline of ideas he wants turned into law, calls for sending money directly to Americans in health savings accounts so they can handle health costs as they see fit.Democrats have rejected the idea as a paltry substitute for Affordable Care Act tax credits that had helped lower monthly premiums for many people before the Republican-led Congress let them expire in the new year.House Democrat leaves chamber shaking head during Trump’s speechRep. Lauren Underwood, the head of the House Democrats’ campaign arm’s candidate recruitment efforts, left the chamber during Trump’s speech. Underwood shook her head as she stood with her purse and coat.The Illinois Democrat waved goodbye to some of her Democratic women colleagues. The women, who were each wearing white as an homage to the suffragist movement, exchanged chuckles before Underwood quietly darted out the back.Trump’s big tax breaks bill divides the CongressRepublicans jumped to cheer on their side of the aisle when Trump praised the GOP majority in Congress that “delivered so beautifully” in passing the bill last year.And when Trump criticized Democrats for voting against it, they too stood and cheered.The bill that became law is the most significant legislative achievement for the president and his party, so far, in his second term.It extended many tax cuts that had been approved during Trump’s first term and were about to expire. The package also offered new tax breaks, including no taxes on tips, overtime pay and others.Trump investment accounts for kids get a shoutout“Tax free investment accounts for every American child. This is something that’s so special. It has taken off and gone through the roof.”Part of Trump’s tax legislation, Trump Accounts are meant to give $1,000 to every newborn, so long as their parents open an account.That money is then invested in the stock market by private firms, and the child can access the money when they turn 18.Parents can contribute up to $2,500 annually in pretax income, and yearly contributions are capped at $5,000. Some of the country’s wealthiest businesspeople have contributed tens of billions of dollars to the initiative, including billionaires Michael and Susan Dell and hedge fund founder Ray Dalio and his wife Barbara.Several major companies announced plans to add Trump Accounts contributions to their benefits packages, including Uber, Intel, IBM, Nvidia and Steak ’n Shake.Outside of the Capitol, Democratic lawmakers respond to Trump’s addressA number of Democratic lawmakers chose to skip the president’s address, with some gathering just outside the Capitol on the National Mall for a “People’s State of the Union.” Standing alongside activists, they argued that Trump’s speech would not offer an accurate portrayal of the state of the nation.“We know our state of the union. We know it is under attack,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland. Democrats held other counterprogramming as well, including a “State of the Swamp” event. The party’s formal rebuttal, however, was scheduled to come from Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger following Trump’s address.Trump touts Republicans’ massive tax and spending law“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.”Republicans’ tax and spending package that Trump signed into law last summer includes various provisions that eliminate federal income taxes on tips for people working in jobs that have traditionally received them, a deduction for older Americans, and the creation of Trump accounts.Trump says he’ll give Medal of Freedom to Team USA hockey goalie“I will soon be presenting Connor with our highest civilian honor.”Trump announced that he will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Team USA hockey goalie Connor Hellebuyck. Trump said the award has been given to “many athletes over the years.”Hellebuyck made 41 saves, many of them spectacular, during the United States’ 2-1 victory over Canada for the gold medal at the Milan Cortina Games.In his first term, Trump honored athletes including golfer Tiger Woods and football players Alan Page and Roger Staubach with the Medal of Freedom. He also awarded it posthumously to baseball great Babe Ruth.US Men’s Olympic Hockey team receives standing ovation and chants of ‘USA’ after Trump shoutoutIn a rare display of bipartisanship, members of the Men’s Olympic Hockey team received a standing ovation as they entered the House chamber after a shoutout from Trump.The players received multiple rounds of applause, chants of “USA” and pumped fists from lawmakers. Rep. Lisa McClain, the Republican House Conference Chair, shouted, “Love you!”Members of the team stood in the gallery seats overlooking the House floor after Trump praised them. Several smiled and waved at the crowd.Trump then gave a shoutout to the women’s team, who also received a standing ovation despite not being in attendance. Both teams won gold at the Winter Olympics in Milan.Video below: Trump brings the Team USA Men’s Hockey Team into the House galleryTrump invites the USA women’s hockey team to the White HouseThe USA women’s hockey team — who, like their male counterparts, were champions at the recent Winter Olympics — will get their due from Washington soon.The women’s team had declined an invitation from Trump to attend Tuesday’s State of the Union due to the timing of the address.As the gold medal-winning men’s team made their appearance during the speech, Trump announced that the women’s team “will soon be coming to the White House.”Trump says US has received over 80 million barrels of Venezuelan oilThe president said the U.S. has received more than 80 million barrels of oil from its “new friend and partner, Venezuela.”That exceeds what his administration had initially projected in the days after the U.S. military carried out a stunning raid in Venezuela’s capital last month and captured then-President Nicolás Maduro.Venezuela’s oil industry produces roughly 1 million barrels a day. The country has the world’s largest proven oil reserves.Trump vowed to turn around Venezuela’s crippling oil industry after Maduro was captured and taken to New York to face drug trafficking charges.Rep. Al Green is escorted from the chamber as Republicans chant ‘USA’The House Sergeant at Arms approached and escorted Green, who stood as Trump began speaking with a sign reading “Black People Aren’t Apes!” from the chamber barely two minutes into the address.Two Trump allies, Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas and Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, had approached the area where Green was sitting before Capitol Police escorted him out.Before Green exited, some Republicans began chanting “USA.”Video below: U.S. Rep. Al Green of Texas escorted out of the State of the UnionTrump begins speech“Our nation is back — bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before.”Trump opened with a triumphant assessment of his first year back in the White House, declaring, “this is the golden age of America.”Trump begins State of the Union address“USA!” chants erupted in the chamber after House Speaker Mike Johnson introduced the president.The president immediately acknowledged first lady Melania Trump and second lady Usha Vance, who both received standing ovations from Republicans.Most Democrats remained seated without applauding. Some of the party’s lawmakers registered their opposition by refraining from attending the speech.Trump briefly greets Supreme Court justicesThe president briefly greeted the four Supreme Court justices, shaking their hands before quickly moving on.Representing the court were Chief Justice John Roberts, Elena Kagan and two of Trump’s appointees, Brett Kavanaugh and Elena Kagan.The greetings were notable because Trump angrily lashed out at the court after the justices in a 6-3 opinion Friday struck down his tariffs, a signature element of his economic policy.Roberts, Coney Barrett and another Trump appointee, Neil Gorsuch, joined the court’s three liberal justices in voting down the tariffs.Trump enters House chamberAfter being announced, President Trump entered the House and made his way to the podium while shaking hands along the way. The president received a standing ovation from across the chamber. Congressional Republicans, Supreme Court justices and the Joint Chiefs of Staff all clapped, and cheers could be heard from the crowd and gallery overlooking the House floor. Trump’s Cabinet entersMost members of the Cabinet chatted with lawmakers. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Attorney General Pam Bondi shook hands with legislators, Supreme Court Justices and members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff before taking their seats.Hegseth chatted and laughed with generals. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick mingled with senators. Transportation Secretary Scott Duffy enthusiastically shook the hand of Rep. Al Green, a frequent Trump critic, approaching and speaking with a group of Democratic senators.Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner struck up conversations with lawmakers.Who’s the designated survivor?They typically start the day as low-profile Cabinet secretaries. They end it that way, too, God willing.But when the rest of the government is gathered together for a big event, like Trump’s State of the Union address, a designated survivor is kept away to ensure someone in the line of leadership succession stays alive.The president’s pick to sit out this time appeared to be Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins, who was also chosen as the designated survivor last year for the president’s address to a joint session of Congress. Collins was not seen in the chamber. The White House did not immediately confirm he was chosen.First lady Melania Trump receives a standing ovation as she enters the chamberRepublicans and attendees in the gallery overlooking the House floor cheered and whistled for the first lady as she waved to her fellow attendees.Democrats stood, but few clapped.Justices of the Supreme Court arrive for State of the Union after Trump’s callsChief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justices Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett took their seats directly in front of the dais where the president is set to speak.Trump last week called justices “disloyal” after the high court delivered a ruling that struck down his tariff regime on imported goods.“I couldn’t care less if they come,” he later said on whether the justices should attend tonight’s address.Trump arrives at the CapitolThe president left the White House at 8:33 p.m. and arrived at the Capitol at 8:41 p.m. His address is scheduled to begin at 9 p.m.Video below: What to expect from President Trump’s State of the Union address Vice President JD Vance and US senators enter House chamberVance and Senate Majority Leader John Thune shook hands with lawmakers as they entered.Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer followed alongside the rest of the senators in attendance.The gallery broke out into applause at the senators’ arrivals.

    President Donald Trump declared during a marathon State of the Union on Tuesday that “we’re winning so much” — insisting he’d sparked an economic boom at home and imposed a new world order abroad in hopes it can counter his sliding approval ratings.

    We fact-checked the State of the Union address with Hearst Television’s National Investigative Unit and our partners at PolitiFact. To follow along with live updates, click here.

    Trump’s main objective was convincing increasingly wary Americans that the economy is stronger than many believe, and that they should vote for more of the same by backing Republicans during November’s midterm elections. In all, Trump spoke for a record 108 minutes, breaking — by eight minutes — the previous time mark from his address before a joint session of Congress last year.

    The president largely avoided his usual bombast, only occasionally veering off-script — mostly to slam Democrats. As he did during such addresses in his first term, Trump relied on a series of surprise special guests to dramatically punctuate his message. They included U.S. military heroes and a former political prisoner released after U.S. forces toppled Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

    Video below: See Trump’s full speech

    Trump drew some of the loudest applause of the night when he invited the Olympic gold medal-winning U.S. men’s hockey team into the House chamber.

    “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, Mister President, we’re winning too much. We can’t take it anymore,’” Trump said before introducing the team.

    The hockey players, wearing their medals and “USA” sweaters, drew a bipartisan standing ovation. Trump pointed to the Democratic side of the chamber and quipped, “That’s the first time I ever I’ve ever seen them get up.”

    In a made-for-TV moment, the president announced he would be awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor, to the hockey team’s goaltender, Connor Hellebuyck. He also bestowed the Purple Heart on Andrew Wolfe — a National Guard member who was shot while deployed on the streets of the nation’s capital. Wolfe made his first public appearance since then during the speech.

    That scene recalled a similar surprise announcement in 2020, when Trump gave the Medal of Freedom to conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh during his State of the Union speech.

    Video below: Fact-checking President Trump’s State of the Union address

    Trump decries tariff decision as justices look on

    The president championed his immigration crackdowns and his push to preserve widespread tariffs that the Supreme Court just struck down. He drew applause only from Democrats while describing the high court’s decision, which he called “an unfortunate ruling.”

    Trump vowed to plow ahead, using “alternative” laws to impose the taxes on imports and telling lawmakers, “Congressional action will not be necessary.” Trump argued that the tariffs are paid by foreign countries, despite evidence that the costs are borne by American consumers and businesses. “It’s saving our country,” he said.

    The only Supreme Court justices attending were Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kagan. Trump greeted them personally before the speech, despite last week slamming Coney Barrett — who he appointed to the high court in his first term — for siding with the majority against his tariffs.

    Democrats also stood for Trump vowing to halt insider trading by members of Congress. But Rep. Mark Takano, a California Democrat, yelled, “How about you first!” Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan Democrat, called out, “You’re the most corrupt president!”

    When some heckling continued, Trump proclaimed, “You should be ashamed of yourselves.” Later, he pointed at Democrats and proclaimed, “These people are crazy.”

    Democratic Rep. Al Green was escorted from the chamber early in the speech, after he unfurled a sign of protest that read “Black People Aren’t Apes!” That was an apparent reference to a racist video the president posted that depicted former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama as primates in a jungle. Green was also removed during Trump’s address last year.

    The president, meanwhile, was mostly optimistic and patriotic, but Trump struck a darker tone in large swaths of his speech to warn about the dangers posed by immigrants. He invited lawmakers from both parties to “protect American citizens, not illegal aliens” and championed proposals to limit mail-in ballots and tighten voter identification rules.

    Affordability gets relatively little time

    Trump didn’t dwell on efforts to lower the cost of living — despite polling showing that his handling of the economy and kitchen-table issues has increasingly become a liability. Such concerns about the high costs of living helped propel Democratic wins around the country on Election Day last November.

    There also are persistent fears that tariffs stoking higher prices could eventually hurt the economy and job creation. Economic growth slowed in the last three months of last year.

    It is potentially politically perilous ahead of November elections that could deliver congressional wins to Democrats, just as 2018’s blue wave created a strong check to his administration during his first term.

    On Tuesday, Trump blamed his predecessor, former President Joe Biden, along with Democratic lawmakers in the chamber, saying they were responsible for rising prices and health care costs, two issues his political opponents have repeatedly raised against him.

    “You caused that problem,” Trump said of affordability concerns. He added a moment later, “They knew their statements were a dirty, rotten lie.”

    Trump also said he’d press tech companies involved in artificial intelligence to pay higher electricity rates in areas where their data centers are located. Such data centers tend to use large volumes of electricity, potentially increasing the cost of power to other consumers in the area.

    Another notable off-script moment came as Trump was referencing prescription drug prices, saying, “So in my first year of the second term — should be my third term — but strange things happen,” prompting at least one chant in the chamber of “Four more years!”

    Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger, who delivered the Democratic response to Trump’s speech, slammed the president’s aggressive immigration policies, his widespread cuts to the federal government and his tariffs.

    “Even though the Supreme Court struck these tariffs down four days ago, the damage to us, the American people, has already been done. Meanwhile, the president is planning for new tariffs,” she said. “Another massive tax hike on you and your family.”

    A warning to Iran

    Trump’s address came as two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran. Trump said, “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,” he added.

    The president also recounted U.S. airstrikes last summer that pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and lauded the raid that ousted Maduro in Venezuela — as well as his administration’s brokering of a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.

    “As president, I will make peace wherever I can,” Trump said. “But I will never hesitate to confront threats to America, wherever we must.”

    Here’s a look at more of the night’s events:

    Trump makes scant mention of immigration, long a favorite issue

    Immigration helped carry Trump to victory in 2024 and it has long been a signature issue for him, but he barely discussed the aggressive and highly consequential steps he took to reshape the immigration system during his fist year in office.

    He didn’t talk about key initiatives under his $170-billion immigration enforcement package that Congress approved: vastly expanding immigration detention, doubling the size of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and building more border wall. He didn’t talk about major policy changes like attempting to end birthright citizenship, denying bond to people who are in immigration custody, suspending asylum at the border and revoking legal status for hundreds of thousands of people who are in the United States on humanitarian grounds.

    And he didn’t discuss his mass deportation campaign — just weeks after Minnesota’s largest cities turned into battlegrounds between immigration officers and protesters and resulted in U.S. officials fatally shooting two U.S. citizens.

    Video below — “You should be ashamed”: President Trump, Democrats get into shouting match during big moment of State of the Union

    Spanberger calls immigration crackdown a drain on law enforcement

    The flood of immigration agents into cities like Minneapolis is unnecessary, wasteful and spreads fear, Spanberger said.

    “Every minute spent sowing fear is a minute not spent investigating murders, crimes against children, or the criminals defrauding seniors of their life savings,” she said. “Our broken immigration system is something to be fixed, not an excuse for unaccountable agents to terrorize our communities.”

    Video below: See the full 2026 Democratic SOTU response

    Spanberger slams ‘poorly trained’ immigration officers

    “Our president has sent poorly trained federal agents into our cities, where they have arrested and detained American citizens and people who aspire to be Americans.”

    Spanberger is criticizing how Trump’s mass deportation agenda is being carried out in places like Chicago and Minneapolis.

    Her comments come just a day after a whistleblower told Congress about how new ICE recruits are being trained and the problems with that training.

    Ryan Schwank accused the Department of Homeland Security of dismantling the training program for new deportation officers and lying about what they were doing.

    DHS has said that there’s been no compromise or corner cutting when it comes to preparing new deportation officers.

    Spanberger poses questions about Trump’s second term in Democratic rebuttal

    “Is the president working to make life more affordable for you and your family? We all know the answer is no”

    Throughout her Democratic response to Trump’s address, Spanberger posed a series of questions to Americans, asking whether they feel life has improved since he returned to office.

    The Democrat, who flipped a Republican-held office last year, is hoping voters across the country will share that assessment when they head to the polls in November.

    Spanberger takes on affordability message in Democratic response to Trump

    Spanberger is arguing in her Democratic rebuttal that costs remain high for many Americans more than a year into his second term.

    Her message, that families are still struggling under Trump’s policies, is one Democrats plan to carry nationwide ahead of the midterm elections. Party leaders point to Spanberger’s double-digit victory in Virginia last November as validation of a disciplined, cost-focused campaign they now hope to replicate across the country.

    Virginia governor delivers Democratic response

    Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger is giving the Democratic Party’s response following Trump’s speech. California Sen. Alex Padilla, who made national headlines last year after being forced to the ground and handcuffed by federal agents, will deliver the party’s response in Spanish.

    Lawmakers leap to their feet with starkly divided responses as Trump concludes his address

    Republicans gave the president their final standing ovation of the night as he concluded his remarks. GOP lawmakers then proceeded to mingle in the chamber. Some walked up to congratulate the president on the celebratory mood in the chamber.

    Democrats also immediately leapt to their feet, though with no fanfare. The caucus almost immediately turned and streamed out of the chamber without applause. Some could be seen scoffing and shaking their heads shortly after Trump wrapped his remarks and descended from the House dais.

    A warning to Iran

    Trump’s address came as two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran. Trump said, “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,” he added.

    The president also recounted U.S. airstrikes last summer that pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and lauded the raid that ousted Maduro in Venezuela — as well as his administration’s brokering of a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.

    Less mentioned was Trump’s having strained U.S. military alliances with NATO, thanks to his push to seize Greenland from Denmark and his failure to take a harder line with Russian President Vladimir Putin in seeking an end to its war in Ukraine. Tuesday marked the fourth anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war.

    First lady presents Medal of Honor to 100-year-old veteran

    Trump asked First Lady Melania Trump to present Royce Williams a Medal of Honor for his actions in a secret mission during the Korean War.

    A military aide was seen bringing the esteemed award down the stairs of the House gallery where Melania Trump and Williams were sitting before she put it around his neck while a standing ovation took over the chamber.

    “He didn’t even want to tell his wife. But the legend grew and grew,” Trump said about the clandestine mission. “But tonight, at 100 years old, this brave Navy captain is finally getting the recognition he deserves.”

    Another victory lap on Maduro and focus on Western Hemisphere

    Trump again celebrated last month’s capture of the Venezuelan leader in an audacious military operation, saying the U.S. “just received from our new friend and partner, Venezuela, more than 80 million barrels of oil.” The Trump administration had previously said it was orchestrating the effort to sell a total of about 30 to 50 million barrels of Venezuelan oil that had been stranded by a partial blockade imposed by the administration.

    Trump paid tribute to a helicopter pilot who was wounded in the operation but still managed to carry out the mission and paused to award him the Congressional Medal of Honor.

    He also introduced a former political prisoner, Enrique Márquez, who was freed by the Venezuelan government last month following the U.S. operation. He was a presidential candidate in the 2024 election and a former member of the National Electoral Council.

    “This was an absolutely colossal victory for the security of the United States,” Trump boasted.

    Trump’s action against Maduro, coupled with an increasingly aggressive posture in the Western Hemisphere aimed at eliminating drug trafficking and illegal migration, are a concern for many in the region — although they also have won support from some smaller countries.

    Trump has likened the strategy to the Monroe Doctrine, with its rejection of outside influences and assertion of U.S. primacy throughout what the administration considers to be “America’s backyard.”

    U.S. forces, under Trump’s orders, have carried out dozens of military strikes on alleged drug-running vessels in the Caribbean, seized sanctioned oil tankers and tightened the embargo of Cuba as part of what the president is referring to as the “Donroe Doctrine.”

    “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,” Trump said.

    Record broken for longest SOTU speech

    Trump’s 108-minute speech broke his own record for the longest presidential address to Congress.

    The prior record was his own 100-minute speech last year to a joint session of Congress. A president’s first-year address to Congress is not technically considered a State of the Union.

    Before 2025, President Bill Clinton had the record with speeches clocking in at 89 minutes in 2000 and 85 minutes in 1995.

    On Monday, the president warned ahead of giving the address that the State of the Union would be long, saying, “I’m making a speech tomorrow night, and you’ll be hearing me say that,” he said. “I mean, it’s going to be a long speech because we have so much to talk about.”

    National Guard members shot in Washington honored

    President Donald Trump presented the Purple Heart medal during his State of the Union Address and honored two National Guard members who were shot while patrolling in Washington last year.

    Trump paused his speech on Tuesday so a military officer could pin the medal on Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe in the House gallery.

    He also honored Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, who died from her injuries, as “a true American patriot” and introduced her parents.

    Wolfe and Beckstrom, members of the West Virginia National Guard, were ambushed in November while deployed to Washington as part of Trump’s executive order to battle what he said was rampant crime.

    Trump mentions killing of Mexican drug lord

    Trump appeared to reference the killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, better known as “El Mencho.”

    The Mexican army killed Oseguera Cervantes Sunday in an attempt to capture him in the western state of Jalisco. Both Mexico and the United States confirmed that there was U.S. intelligence support for the operation.

    Trump said, “We’ve also taken down one of the most sinister cartel kingpins of all. You saw that yesterday.”

    Some 70 people died in the operation and violence that erupted after it.

    Trump touts shaky ceasefire deal in Gaza

    Among the several conflicts he claims to have ended, Trump mentioned the ongoing, fragile ceasefire deal in Gaza.

    “I negotiated every single hostage, both living and dead, has been returned home. Can you believe that? Nobody thought it was possible,” the president said during his speech.

    While the U.S.-brokered deal between Israel and Hamas has halted major military operations, freed the last hostages held by Hamas and ramped up aid deliveries to Gaza, a lasting resolution to the two-year war ignited by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack into Israel remains elusive.

    Trump says Homeland Security shutdown is impacting snow cleanup

    “We’d love to give you a hand at cleaning it up, but you gave no money. Nobody’s getting paid.”

    Trump said the DHS shutdown was preventing the federal government from “helping people clean up their snow,” referring to the massive snowstorm that impacted much of the northeastern U.S. this week.

    The Federal Emergency Management Agency, housed under DHS, rarely helps states with snow cleanup, except in some instances of record snowfall or near-record snowfall, or when an ice storm causes catastrophic damage. States first request a disaster declaration that the president must approve.

    A government shutdown also doesn’t necessarily stop FEMA disaster response: The more than 10,000 staff who make up the bulk of FEMA’s disaster response and recovery force continue to work and be paid during a government shutdown, and disaster spending can continue for as long as the agency’s non-lapsing Disaster Relief Fund has money.

    Trump highlights case of Ukrainian woman killed on North Carolina train

    “We will ensure justice for your magnificent daughter, Iryna.”

    Among those in the audience was the mother of 23-year-old Iryna Zarutska, an Ukrainian refugee who was fatally stabbed by a man on a North Carolina commuter train last August.

    Her killing captured on camera in Charlotte sparked intense criticism over why the suspect, Decarlos Brown Jr., was on the street despite 14 prior criminal arrests.

    The Trump administration has pointed to the killing to argue that local leaders, judges and policies in Democratic-led cities are failing to protect their residents from violent crime.

    Brown has been charged with a federal crime that could carry the death penalty.

    Erika Kirk recognized

    Erika Kirk, the widow of influential conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated this past fall, was recognized during President Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday. The president also called for an end to political violence.

    Trump talks about recent SCOTUS ruling on tariffs

    Trump drew applause only from Democrats while describing the Supreme Court’s ruling last week, striking down many of his signature tariff policies. The president called it “an unfortunate ruling” and said “everything was working well” before the court’s decision.

    But Trump said he would plow ahead, using “alternative” laws to impose the taxes on imports and telling lawmakers, “Congressional action will not be necessary.”

    He also made a bold prediction, suggesting that someday tariffs would “substantially replace” the modern income tax system. He claimed the tariffs are paid by foreign countries despite evidence that the costs are borne by American consumers and businesses.

    “It’s saving our country,” Trump said of tariffs, adding that they were “peace-protecting.”

    The Supreme Court justices in attendance were the same who came to Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress last March: Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Elena Kagan. Trump greeted the justices and even shook handswith Coney Barrett, after previously slamming her for siding with the majority against Trump’s tariffs — despite him appointing her to the high court in his first term.

    Trump tells Democrats they’re responsible for high costs

    “You caused that problem.”

    Trump directly addressed Democrats, blaming them for the high costs that are troubling voters. This has been a major theme of Trump’s speech tonight and is also an argument he makes frequently when talking about the economy.

    Recent polling shows rising frustration with Trump’s approach to the economy.

    He went on to directly blame Democrats for health care costs, a problem he told them is “caused by you.” He cited the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama’s health care law that Republicans have tried and failed to repeal.

    Trump touts his health care proposal, which hasn’t made headway in Congress yet

    “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 health care.”

    Trump is referring to a health care proposal he pitched to congressional Republicans in January, in hopes that they would turn it into legislation to make health care more affordable. No such legislation has gotten enough momentum to pass yet.

    His pitch, a general outline of ideas he wants turned into law, calls for sending money directly to Americans in health savings accounts so they can handle health costs as they see fit.

    Democrats have rejected the idea as a paltry substitute for Affordable Care Act tax credits that had helped lower monthly premiums for many people before the Republican-led Congress let them expire in the new year.

    House Democrat leaves chamber shaking head during Trump’s speech

    Rep. Lauren Underwood, the head of the House Democrats’ campaign arm’s candidate recruitment efforts, left the chamber during Trump’s speech. Underwood shook her head as she stood with her purse and coat.

    The Illinois Democrat waved goodbye to some of her Democratic women colleagues. The women, who were each wearing white as an homage to the suffragist movement, exchanged chuckles before Underwood quietly darted out the back.

    Trump’s big tax breaks bill divides the Congress

    Republicans jumped to cheer on their side of the aisle when Trump praised the GOP majority in Congress that “delivered so beautifully” in passing the bill last year.

    And when Trump criticized Democrats for voting against it, they too stood and cheered.

    The bill that became law is the most significant legislative achievement for the president and his party, so far, in his second term.

    It extended many tax cuts that had been approved during Trump’s first term and were about to expire. The package also offered new tax breaks, including no taxes on tips, overtime pay and others.

    Trump investment accounts for kids get a shoutout

    “Tax free investment accounts for every American child. This is something that’s so special. It has taken off and gone through the roof.”

    Part of Trump’s tax legislation, Trump Accounts are meant to give $1,000 to every newborn, so long as their parents open an account.

    That money is then invested in the stock market by private firms, and the child can access the money when they turn 18.

    Parents can contribute up to $2,500 annually in pretax income, and yearly contributions are capped at $5,000. Some of the country’s wealthiest businesspeople have contributed tens of billions of dollars to the initiative, including billionaires Michael and Susan Dell and hedge fund founder Ray Dalio and his wife Barbara.

    Several major companies announced plans to add Trump Accounts contributions to their benefits packages, including Uber, Intel, IBM, Nvidia and Steak ’n Shake.

    Outside of the Capitol, Democratic lawmakers respond to Trump’s address

    A number of Democratic lawmakers chose to skip the president’s address, with some gathering just outside the Capitol on the National Mall for a “People’s State of the Union.” Standing alongside activists, they argued that Trump’s speech would not offer an accurate portrayal of the state of the nation.

    “We know our state of the union. We know it is under attack,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland. Democrats held other counterprogramming as well, including a “State of the Swamp” event. The party’s formal rebuttal, however, was scheduled to come from Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger following Trump’s address.

    Trump touts Republicans’ massive tax and spending law

    “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.”

    Republicans’ tax and spending package that Trump signed into law last summer includes various provisions that eliminate federal income taxes on tips for people working in jobs that have traditionally received them, a deduction for older Americans, and the creation of Trump accounts.

    Trump says he’ll give Medal of Freedom to Team USA hockey goalie

    “I will soon be presenting Connor with our highest civilian honor.”

    Trump announced that he will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Team USA hockey goalie Connor Hellebuyck. Trump said the award has been given to “many athletes over the years.”

    Hellebuyck made 41 saves, many of them spectacular, during the United States’ 2-1 victory over Canada for the gold medal at the Milan Cortina Games.

    In his first term, Trump honored athletes including golfer Tiger Woods and football players Alan Page and Roger Staubach with the Medal of Freedom. He also awarded it posthumously to baseball great Babe Ruth.

    US Men’s Olympic Hockey team receives standing ovation and chants of ‘USA’ after Trump shoutout

    In a rare display of bipartisanship, members of the Men’s Olympic Hockey team received a standing ovation as they entered the House chamber after a shoutout from Trump.

    The players received multiple rounds of applause, chants of “USA” and pumped fists from lawmakers. Rep. Lisa McClain, the Republican House Conference Chair, shouted, “Love you!”

    Members of the team stood in the gallery seats overlooking the House floor after Trump praised them. Several smiled and waved at the crowd.

    Trump then gave a shoutout to the women’s team, who also received a standing ovation despite not being in attendance. Both teams won gold at the Winter Olympics in Milan.

    Video below: Trump brings the Team USA Men’s Hockey Team into the House gallery

    Trump invites the USA women’s hockey team to the White House

    The USA women’s hockey team — who, like their male counterparts, were champions at the recent Winter Olympics — will get their due from Washington soon.

    The women’s team had declined an invitation from Trump to attend Tuesday’s State of the Union due to the timing of the address.

    As the gold medal-winning men’s team made their appearance during the speech, Trump announced that the women’s team “will soon be coming to the White House.”

    Trump says US has received over 80 million barrels of Venezuelan oil

    The president said the U.S. has received more than 80 million barrels of oil from its “new friend and partner, Venezuela.”

    That exceeds what his administration had initially projected in the days after the U.S. military carried out a stunning raid in Venezuela’s capital last month and captured then-President Nicolás Maduro.

    Venezuela’s oil industry produces roughly 1 million barrels a day. The country has the world’s largest proven oil reserves.

    Trump vowed to turn around Venezuela’s crippling oil industry after Maduro was captured and taken to New York to face drug trafficking charges.

    Rep. Al Green is escorted from the chamber as Republicans chant ‘USA’

    The House Sergeant at Arms approached and escorted Green, who stood as Trump began speaking with a sign reading “Black People Aren’t Apes!” from the chamber barely two minutes into the address.

    Two Trump allies, Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas and Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, had approached the area where Green was sitting before Capitol Police escorted him out.

    Before Green exited, some Republicans began chanting “USA.”

    Video below: U.S. Rep. Al Green of Texas escorted out of the State of the Union

    Trump begins speech

    “Our nation is back — bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before.”

    Trump opened with a triumphant assessment of his first year back in the White House, declaring, “this is the golden age of America.”

    Trump begins State of the Union address

    “USA!” chants erupted in the chamber after House Speaker Mike Johnson introduced the president.

    The president immediately acknowledged first lady Melania Trump and second lady Usha Vance, who both received standing ovations from Republicans.

    Most Democrats remained seated without applauding. Some of the party’s lawmakers registered their opposition by refraining from attending the speech.

    Trump briefly greets Supreme Court justices

    The president briefly greeted the four Supreme Court justices, shaking their hands before quickly moving on.

    Representing the court were Chief Justice John Roberts, Elena Kagan and two of Trump’s appointees, Brett Kavanaugh and Elena Kagan.

    The greetings were notable because Trump angrily lashed out at the court after the justices in a 6-3 opinion Friday struck down his tariffs, a signature element of his economic policy.

    Roberts, Coney Barrett and another Trump appointee, Neil Gorsuch, joined the court’s three liberal justices in voting down the tariffs.

    Trump enters House chamber

    After being announced, President Trump entered the House and made his way to the podium while shaking hands along the way.

    The president received a standing ovation from across the chamber. Congressional Republicans, Supreme Court justices and the Joint Chiefs of Staff all clapped, and cheers could be heard from the crowd and gallery overlooking the House floor.

    Trump’s Cabinet enters

    Most members of the Cabinet chatted with lawmakers. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Attorney General Pam Bondi shook hands with legislators, Supreme Court Justices and members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff before taking their seats.

    Hegseth chatted and laughed with generals. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick mingled with senators. Transportation Secretary Scott Duffy enthusiastically shook the hand of Rep. Al Green, a frequent Trump critic, approaching and speaking with a group of Democratic senators.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner struck up conversations with lawmakers.

    Who’s the designated survivor?

    They typically start the day as low-profile Cabinet secretaries. They end it that way, too, God willing.

    But when the rest of the government is gathered together for a big event, like Trump’s State of the Union address, a designated survivor is kept away to ensure someone in the line of leadership succession stays alive.

    The president’s pick to sit out this time appeared to be Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins, who was also chosen as the designated survivor last year for the president’s address to a joint session of Congress. Collins was not seen in the chamber. The White House did not immediately confirm he was chosen.

    First lady Melania Trump receives a standing ovation as she enters the chamber

    Republicans and attendees in the gallery overlooking the House floor cheered and whistled for the first lady as she waved to her fellow attendees.

    Democrats stood, but few clapped.

    Justices of the Supreme Court arrive for State of the Union after Trump’s calls

    Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justices Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett took their seats directly in front of the dais where the president is set to speak.

    Trump last week called justices “disloyal” after the high court delivered a ruling that struck down his tariff regime on imported goods.

    “I couldn’t care less if they come,” he later said on whether the justices should attend tonight’s address.

    Trump arrives at the Capitol

    The president left the White House at 8:33 p.m. and arrived at the Capitol at 8:41 p.m. His address is scheduled to begin at 9 p.m.

    Video below: What to expect from President Trump’s State of the Union address

    Vice President JD Vance and US senators enter House chamber

    Vance and Senate Majority Leader John Thune shook hands with lawmakers as they entered.

    Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer followed alongside the rest of the senators in attendance.

    The gallery broke out into applause at the senators’ arrivals.

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  • Mother of refugee killed in Charlotte was a guest at Trump’s State of the Union

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    President Donald Trump invited Anna Zarutska, the mother of a Ukrainian refugee killed on a train in Charlotte last summer, to be one of his guests at the State of the Union on Tuesday.

    “We are honored to be joined tonight by a woman who has been through hell,” Trump said. “Anna Zarutska.”

    Cameras panned to where Zarutska sat. She didn’t speak but stood up and dabbed her eyes as the audience clapped. She sat next to Erika Kirk, the widow of Charlie Kirk, a right-wing activist who founded Turning Point USA and was assassinated just weeks after Iryna Zarutska was fatally stabbed on a Charlotte light-rail train.

    Typically, guests of the president are used to punctuate points in the speech. During the second half of a nearly two-hour speech, Trump explained Iryna Zarutska’s death in detail from the House dais.

    Trump also falsely said Zarutska’s accused killer “came in through open borders.”

    “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 a no cash bail, stood up and viciously slashed a knife through her neck and body,” Trump said.

    On Aug. 22, Zarutska boarded a train at the Scaleybark station and moments later was fatally stabbed. Police accused 34-year-old DeCarlos Brown, a Charlotte native, in Zarutska’s death.

    At the time, Brown was out of jail without bail for a charge of misuse of the 911 system.

    Brown has a history of mental health issues, including a schizophrenia diagnosis, but his mother told The Charlotte Observer that despite seeking treatment for her son, she was repeatedly turned away.

    “No one will ever forget the expression of terror on Iryna’s face,” Trump said, “as she looked up at her attacker in the last seconds of her life.”

    Trump noted that Zarutska had escaped the war in Ukraine only to be killed in Charlotte.

    “And by the way, what’s going on in Charlotte?” he asked.

    Anna Zarutska, the mother of Iryna Zarutska, is recognized as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC. Iryna Zarutska was killed on a light-rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina in August 2025.
    Anna Zarutska, the mother of Iryna Zarutska, is recognized as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC. Iryna Zarutska was killed on a light-rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina in August 2025. Kenny Holston-Pool Getty Images

    Tuesday marked the fourth year since Russia launched a full-scale invasion against Ukraine. Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, has repeatedly asked Trump for help against Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Trump has gone back and forth in his approach to the two leaders.

    On Tuesday, his allegiance was to Anna Zarutska.

    “I promise you, we will ensure justice for your magnificent daughter,” he said.

    President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24, 2026, in Washington, D.C.
    President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24, 2026, in Washington, D.C. Jessica Koscielniak/Pool TNS

    This story was originally published February 25, 2026 at 12:10 AM.

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    Danielle Battaglia

    McClatchy DC

    Danielle Battaglia is the D.C. correspondent for The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer, leading coverage of North Carolina’s congressional delegation and elections. She also covers the White House. Her career has spanned three North Carolina newsrooms where she has covered crime, courts and local, state and national politics. She has won two McClatchy President’s awards and numerous national and state awards for her work.

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  • Mother of refugee killed in Charlotte was a guest at Trump’s State of the Union

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    President Donald Trump invited Anna Zarutska, the mother of a Ukrainian refugee killed on a train in Charlotte last summer, to be one of his guests at the State of the Union on Tuesday.

    “We are honored to be joined tonight by a woman who has been through hell,” Trump said. “Anna Zarutska.”

    Cameras panned to where Zarutska sat. She didn’t speak but stood up and dabbed her eyes as the audience clapped. She sat next to Erika Kirk, the widow of Charlie Kirk, a right-wing activist who founded Turning Point USA and was assassinated just weeks after Iryna Zarutska was fatally stabbed on a Charlotte light-rail train.

    Typically, guests of the president are used to punctuate points in the speech. During the second half of a nearly two-hour speech, Trump explained Iryna Zarutska’s death in detail from the House dais.

    Trump also falsely said Zarutska’s accused killer “came in through open borders.”

    “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 a no cash bail, stood up and viciously slashed a knife through her neck and body,” Trump said.

    On Aug. 22, Zarutska boarded a train at the Scaleybark station and moments later was fatally stabbed. Police accused 34-year-old DeCarlos Brown, a Charlotte native, in Zarutska’s death.

    At the time, Brown was out of jail without bail for a charge of misuse of the 911 system.

    Brown has a history of mental health issues, including a schizophrenia diagnosis, but his mother told The Charlotte Observer that despite seeking treatment for her son, she was repeatedly turned away.

    “No one will ever forget the expression of terror on Iryna’s face,” Trump said, “as she looked up at her attacker in the last seconds of her life.”

    Trump noted that Zarutska had escaped the war in Ukraine only to be killed in Charlotte.

    “And by the way, what’s going on in Charlotte?” he asked.

    Anna Zarutska, the mother of Iryna Zarutska, is recognized as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC. Iryna Zarutska was killed on a light-rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina in August 2025.
    Anna Zarutska, the mother of Iryna Zarutska, is recognized as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC. Iryna Zarutska was killed on a light-rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina in August 2025. Kenny Holston-Pool Getty Images

    Tuesday marked the fourth year since Russia launched a full-scale invasion against Ukraine. Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, has repeatedly asked Trump for help against Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Trump has gone back and forth in his approach to the two leaders.

    On Tuesday, his allegiance was to Anna Zarutska.

    “I promise you, we will ensure justice for your magnificent daughter,” he said.

    President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24, 2026, in Washington, D.C.
    President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24, 2026, in Washington, D.C. Jessica Koscielniak/Pool TNS

    This story was originally published February 25, 2026 at 12:10 AM.

    Related Stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    Danielle Battaglia

    McClatchy DC

    Danielle Battaglia is the D.C. correspondent for The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer, leading coverage of North Carolina’s congressional delegation and elections. She also covers the White House. Her career has spanned three North Carolina newsrooms where she has covered crime, courts and local, state and national politics. She has won two McClatchy President’s awards and numerous national and state awards for her work.

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  • It’s Not Just You. Trump’s State of the Union Triggered Siri on iPhone Users’ Phones

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    If you were watching the State of the Union address, and you’re an iPhone user, then toward the end of the speech, during President Trump’s recounting of the story of Chief Warrant Officer Eric Slover, you might have had Siri triggered—assuming you have voice activation turned on.

    Gizmodo’s own Matt Novak brought it to my attention:

    This feature once required the user to say “Hey Siri” but now only requires “Siri.” 

    At least one other Bluesky user confirmed that she experienced the same thing. A user on X said the erroneous Siri trigger word was “serious” not “searing,” but the timing of the post suggests it was the same moment.

    Another Bluesky user (whose posts are off-limits to those who are not logged into Bluesky), posted a Google results page Siri pulled up following the Siri-triggering line, featuring a bunch a results about bullets going through legs.

    Trump’s recounting of Slover’s harrowing story very much did include such gory details:

    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 a 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.

    Exactly which word or words woke up Siri—”searing” or “serious” or perhaps some part of “…was hit very…”—are not yet totally clear, but it clearly happened around this moment.

    But if your Siri was triggered, I hope it spiced up an otherwise dire night of politics. That speech was rough, folks!

    Siri itself is expected to receive an update from Apple next month.

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    Mike Pearl

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  • California’s Congress members’ plans for Trump’s State of the Union address

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    Boycotts. Prebuttals. Rebuttals. Historic guests.

    California members of the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives’ approach to President Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night are as varied as their politics and their districts.

    Before the speech, Sen. Adam Schiff described Trump as an out-of-control and corrupt president who has ignored pressing issues such as climate change in order to enrich himself and punish his political enemies, including by turning the U.S. Department of Justice and the rest of the federal government into a “personal fiefdom,” unbound by the law.

    “From the birth of our nation, our founders were obsessed with preventing tyranny and the emergence of another king, another despot. They created checks and balances, separation of powers, an independent judiciary. They understood that the greatest threat to liberty wasn’t foreign invasion, it was the concentration of power in the hands of one person or faction,” Schiff said on the floor of the U.S. Senate. “This president has systematically dismantled these safeguards in his second term.”

    Schiff is among the Democrats boycotting the speech. Other Californians include Reps. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach), Sara Jacobs (D-San Diego), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Los Angeles) and Julia Brownley (D-Westlake Village).

    Sen. Alex Padilla, the son of immigrants who was tackled in Los Angeles last year when he attempted to ask Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem a question during the immigration raids, will deliver a Spanish-language response after Trump’s address on television and online.

    California has the largest congressional delegation in the nation, so its elected officials frequently have an outsized presence in the nation’s capital. An especially memorable moment was when then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) ripped up a copy of Trump’s speech after the 2020 State of the Union address.

    It’s unclear whether California elected officials plan anything as dramatic tonight. But their guests are notable.

    Though Garcia is not attending the speech, his guest at the event is Annie Farmer, a woman who was abused at the age of 16 by sexual predators Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Dublin), who is attending, is bringing Teresa J. Helm — another Epstein abuse survivor.

    Others plan to bring constituents from their districts — Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Corona) is bringing Ben Benoit, the Riverside County auditor-controller who is a longtime friend.

    Pelosi’s guest is the Rev. Devon Jerome Crawford, senior pastor of historic Third Baptist Church of San Francisco. And some have surprise guests who will be unveiled later tonight.

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    Seema Mehta, Kevin Rector

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  • Trump’s State of the Union will seek to calm voters’ economic concerns ahead of midterm elections

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    By WILL WEISSERT

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump will use Tuesday’s State of the Union address to champion his immigration crackdowns, his slashing of the federal government, his push to preserve widespread tariffs that the Supreme Court just struck down and his ability to direct quick-hit military actions around the world, including in Iran and Venezuela.

    The Republican hopes he can convince increasingly wary Americans that his policies have improved their lives while ensuring that the U.S. economy is stronger than many believe — and that they should vote for more of the same in November.

Affordability questions loom large

No matter what his prepared remarks say, Trump relishes deviating into personal grievances, meaning Tuesday will probably feature topics like denying that he lost the 2020 presidential election.

His lack of messaging discipline has been on display after concerns about high costs of living helped propel Democratic wins around the country on Election Day last November. The White House subsequently promised that the president would travel the country nearly every week to reassure Americans he was taking affordability seriously. But Trump has spent more time blaming Democrats and scoffing at the notion that kitchen table issues demand attention.

Trump instead boasts of having tamed inflation and says he has the economy humming given that the Dow Jones Industrial Average recently exceeded 50,000 points for the first time.

Such gains don’t feel tangible to those without stock portfolios, however. There also are persistent fears that tariffs stoked higher prices, which could eventually hurt the economy and job creation. Economic growth slowed the last three months of last year.

Waldman, now president of the Brennan Center for Justice, which advocates for democracy, civil liberties and fair elections, said previous presidents faced similar instances of “economic disquiet.”

That created a question of “how much do you sell vs. feeling the pain of the electorate,” he said.

Shesol noted that Trump has “always believed — going back to his real estate days — that he can sell anyone on anything.”

“He’s still doing that. But the problem is, you can’t tell somebody who has lost their job and can’t get a new one that things are going great,” Shesol said. “He can’t sell people on a reality that for them, and frankly for most Americans, does not exist.”

It is potentially politically perilous ahead of November elections that could deliver congressional wins to Democrats, just as 2018’s blue wave created a strong check to his administration during his first term.

Democrats’ response to Trump’s speech will be delivered by Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger, whose affordability-focused message helped her flip a Republican-held office last November.

Several Democrats in Congress, meanwhile, plan to skip Trump’s speech in protest, instead attending a rally known as the “People’s State of the Union” on Washington’s National Mall.

Foreign policy in focus

Trump’s address comes as two U.S. aircraft carriers have been dispatched to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran.

The president will recount how U.S. airstrikes last summer pounded Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, and laud the raid that ousted Venezuelan President Nicolas Nicolás Maduro, as well as his administration’s brokering of a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.

But he also strained U.S. military alliances with NATO, thanks to his push to seize Greenland from Denmark and his failure to take a harder line with Russian President Vladimir Putin in seeking an end to its war in Ukraine. Tuesday was the fourth anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war.

Making any foreign policy feel relevant to Americans back home is never easy.

Jennifer Anju Grossman, a former speechwriter for Republican President George H.W. Bush and current CEO of the Atlas Society, which promotes the ideas of author and philosopher Ayn Rand, said Trump can make clear that Maduro’s socialist policies wrecked Venezuela’s economy to the point where one of the world’s richest oil countries struggled to meet its own energy needs.

Now, oil from that country will help lower American gas prices.

Still, when it comes to overseas developments, she said, “I think it’s going to be a bit of a challenge to make clear why this is relevant to the domestic situation.”

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  • Newsom and Trump have vowed to crack down on corporate home buying. A new bill aims to curb it

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    In a rare moment of political alignment last month, Gov. Gavin Newsom and President Trump vowed to crack down on corporate home buying. Now, a new bill aims to make it a reality.

    Assembly Bill 1611, introduced by Assemblymember Matt Haney (D-San Francisco) in January, would eliminate a “tax loophole” that Haney says corporate landlords and investment firms use to buy up single-family homes across the state.

    “It’s shocking to me that by design, our tax system lets large firms take advantage of tax breaks in order to outbid California families when buying homes,” Haney said. “They’re able to use a tax loophole to give themselves an upper hand.”

    The so-called loophole takes the form of a 1031 exchange — a tax-filing strategy that allows real estate owners to defer capital gains taxes when they sell an investment property, such as a single-family home, as long as they buy a similar “like-kind” property within 180 days. Essentially, it allows investors to replace one investment property with another, avoiding taxes in the process.

    The bill would ban companies that own at least 50 single-family homes from taking advantage of the tax break. It would apply to sales completed after Jan. 1, 2026.

    California has the second-lowest homeownership rate in the country at 56%, and Haney said corporations shouldn’t be shirking real estate taxes in the midst of a housing crisis. The California Department of Finance estimated that during the current fiscal year, the state lost $1.2 billion in revenue due to like-kind exchanges.

    Lenny Goldberg, the policy director for the California Tax Reform Assn., worked with Haney to develop the bill. He said he has viewed like-kind exchanges as a rip-off for years, but it’s an ongoing issue with a powerful lobby behind it.

    “They’re called like-kind exchanges, but they’re not actually like-kind,” he said. “You can exchange an office building for a hotel, or an apartment building for a single-family home.”

    He added that corporate investors aren’t buying up high-end neighborhoods; it’s mostly working-class or middle-class areas, where the affordability crisis is more acute.

    Goldberg said the ban would help in two ways. First, it would result in more tax dollars being paid by corporations. And second, it would stop allowing corporations to dominate bidding wars for homes.

    Currently, corporate owners can afford to bid more on a home than an individual, knowing that when they eventually sell it, they can avoid the capital gains tax by buying a different property, making it a more valuable asset. If they didn’t have access to that benefit, that advantage would be gone.

    He sees it as a modest proposal; a more ambitious effort would be to eliminate like-kind exchanges altogether. But this is a good place to start, and it still lets mom-and-pop landlords or investors who own fewer than 50 properties to take advantage of the tax break, he said.

    The corporate home buying trend became a focal point during the pandemic emergency, when low interest rates sent the housing market into a frenzy, and first-time home buyers competed with investors viewing the house as an asset, not a home. During the second quarter of 2021, 23% of home sales in L.A. County went to investors rather than someone wanting to live there.

    But data show that corporate ownership still makes up a much smaller share of the overall market. Analysis from the California Research Bureau showed that 2.8% of single-family homes in the Golden State are owned by companies that own at least 10 properties.

    The biggest chunk of that appears to be smaller mom-and-pop landlords rather than giant corporations. Companies with more than 50 properties own roughly 110,000 homes in California, whereas companies with 10 to 49 properties, which would be exempt from the ban, own roughly 235,000 properties.

    Haney said now is the right time for the bill, given the momentum provided by Newsom and Trump last month.

    Newsom vowed to take a tougher stance on corporate home buying in his final State of the State speech, saying that “it’s shameful that we allow private equity firms in Manhattan to become some of the biggest landlords in many of our cities.”

    It’s unclear which form the crackdown will take; Newsom said it means more oversight and enforcement, and potentially changing the tax code.

    A few weeks prior, Trump announced immediate steps to ban institutional investors from buying single-family homes, but no specific actions have been announced.

    Haney said it’s also timely in the aftermath of the Palisades and Eaton fires, since data show that investors are flooding the market for burned-out lots, replacing longtime locals. A recent Redfin report said at least 40% of lot sales in fire-damaged areas went to investors in the third quarter of 2025.

    “It shows you that this shouldn’t be a partisan issue. Whatever your political leaning, you should want regular families to have access to homeownership,” Haney said. “Maybe this is one of the rare issues where there’s broad agreement across political stripes, and we can actually solve a problem.”

    A different bill addressing institutional investors, AB 1240, took a different approach. Introduced by Assemblymember Alex Lee (D-San José), it looked to ban investors that own at least 1,000 single-family properties from buying more homes in order to rent them out.

    Nine companies own more than 1,000 single-family homes in California. The largest is Invitation Homes, which owns more than 11,000 homes in the state and has faced a litany of lawsuits related to unpermitted renovations, unfair eviction practices and withheld security deposits.

    Lee’s bill passed the state Assembly last year but stalled after fierce opposition from real estate agents and the California Apartment Assn. It awaits a Senate committee hearing.

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  • 4 Questions About Trump’s State of the Union

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    President Donald Trump will give the first State of the Union address of his second term tomorrow. He’s expected to defend his economic record and restate his position in the tense standoff with Iran, but there could be some surprises in the prime-time speech.

    I’ve written about these supernovas of presidential rhetoric for three decades – my first was President Bill Clinton’s State of the Union in 1998. To put in perspective how much time has passed, the federal budget ran a surplus of $69 billion that fiscal year. The fiscal 2025 deficit is projected to hit $1.9 trillion.

    This year’s speech comes days after the Supreme Court struck down the sweeping tariffs Trump imposed under a 1977 law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. While the 6-3 ruling was a body blow to his signature economic policy, he says he will try to impose some tariffs in other ways.

    If any justices attend, they’ll be seated right in his line of sight.

    With the benefit of experience, I’m offering four questions about Trump’s remarks – and hopefully at least a couple of answers.

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    Does It Still Matter?

    Technically, we’ll be tuning in because the Constitution (Article II, Section 3) says the president has to provide this assessment “from time to time.” It does not specify a speech. This could be done in writing.

    But that would be political malpractice. As countless White House aides have told me over the decades, this is probably the largest audience an American politician will get all year, even if recent ratings are down from their heyday.

    The most recent State of the Union speeches haven’t been just for TV or radio. People follow along on their phones. Clips of key moments zip around social media for days. And I, for one, am very curious to see how the remarks do on YouTube, our most-watched television platform.

    So yes, it very much matters, even if it does not move the needle much in our hyper-polarized political context.

    What Does He Need to Say?

    One frequent inside-the-Beltway jibe is that any president might as well declare, “Tonight, I come before you to speak in ringing tones and stare into the middle distance.” The chief executive is expected to defend their record and offer some clues about how they view the way forward.

    But tomorrow’s speech will be a window into how seriously the White House and the unpopular president view the challenge of selling his economic record in a midterm election year. (I separate the two because what the speechwriters craft and what Trump delivers are often at odds.)

    Will this be more of the same language that he has used, in vain, to try to reverse his slide in the polls? Or will he try a new tack?

    There can always be surprises. In 1996, seeking reelection, President Bill Clinton declared, “The era of big government is over.” A few months after 9/11, President George W. Bush lumped Iran, Iraq and North Korea in an “axis of evil.” In 2006, Bush called for legislation to prevent the creation of “human-animal hybrids.”

    In an era of off-the-cuff presidential moments, pity the speechwriters – like Raymond Price, the aide in charge of writing President Richard Nixon’s 1970 speech. History records that Price pulled several all-nighters thanks to amphetamines known as “greenies,” courtesy of the White House doctor.

    What Will Democrats Do?

    Well. Last year’s response when Trump addressed a joint meeting of Congress included a cane-waving outburst, which led to an ejection from the House chamber. It was pretty cringey.

    But it was an effort to get beyond responding with a live televised speech of their own, a tradition for decades. These deliveries from both parties have been unmemorable at best. Those that stand out often do so for the wrong reasons, like then-Senator Marco Rubio’s 2013 remarks, which he famously interrupted to take a gulp of water.

    This year the task falls to Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger.

    At least a dozen Democratic senators and representatives have already said they will boycott Trump’s speech, according to NBC. Some will attend a counter-programming rally, dubbed the “People’s State of the Union,” on the National Mall near the Capitol, the New York Times says.

    What’s a Skutnik?

    That’s D.C. jargon for the special guests who sit in the gallery above the House floor, waiting to be invoked by the president.

    We owe the term to President Ronald Reagan’s 1982 speech, which came two weeks after an airliner crashed into the icy Potomac River. Reagan gave one of those seats to Lenny Skutnik for his heroic efforts to save survivors and paid tribute to him in his remarks.

    Trump has been adept at those moments, whether stoking partisan passions by giving right-wing commentator Rush Limbaugh the Presidential Medal of Freedom or drawing a bipartisan standing ovation by reuniting a soldier with his family after a deployment overseas.

    Both were surprises. What’s in store tomorrow?

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  • Moore County man, 21, killed by Secret Service agents at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach

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    A 21-year-old man from Carthage, North Carolina, was shot and killed Sunday by U.S. Secret Service agents at President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

    The suspect was identified as Austin Tucker Martin, 21, the Associated Press reports, according to a person familiar with the matter who remained anonymous.

    According to the Moore County Sheriff’s Office, Martin was reported missing by family members in North Carolina. Officials told WRAL News the FBI was at Martin’s home in Carthage on Sunday afternoon.

    Anthony Guglielmi, a Secret Service spokesman, confirmed the suspect was armed with a shotgun and gas can when he drove through the north gate of Mar-a-Lago after 1 a.m. as another vehicle was exiting and was confronted by Secret Service agents.

    Investigators believe the suspect left North Carolina and headed south, picking up a shotgun along the way, Guglielmi said.

    According to the Associated Press, Braeden Fields, Martin’s cousin, reacted with disbelief. He described Martin as quiet, afraid of guns and from a family of avid Trump supporters.

    “He’s a good kid,” Fields, 19, said. He said they grew up together. “I wouldn’t believe he would do something like this. It’s mind-blowing,” Fields said.

    He said Martin worked at a local golf course and would send money from each paycheck to charity.

    “He wouldn’t even hurt an ant. He doesn’t even know how to use a gun,” Fields said. He said his cousin didn’t discuss politics. “We are big Trump supporters, all of us. Everybody,” Fields said, but his cousin was “real quiet, never really talked about anything.”

    Trump, who often spends weekends at the resort, and first lady Melania Trump, were both at the White House at the time of the shooting. The motive is still under investigation. 

    Palm Beach County Sheriff Rick Bradshaw, speaking at a brief press conference, said the man was confronted by two Secret Service agents and a sheriff’s deputy.

    “He was ordered to drop those two pieces of equipment that he had with them. At which time he put down the gas can, raised the shotgun to a shooting position,” Bradshaw said. The two agents and the deputy “fired their weapons to neutralize the threat.”

    It’s not the first time threats to Trump’s life have been tied to a suspect from North Carolina. In September 2024, Ryan Routh, from Greensboro, was captured after trying to assassinate Trump on a Florida golf course near Mar-a-Lago. Routh was sentenced to life in prison earlier this month

    Trump was also wounded during an assassination attempt during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July 2024.

    After Sunday’s shooting, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a post on X:

    “In the middle of the night while most Americans were asleep, the United States Secret Service acted quickly and decisively to neutralize a crazy person, armed with a gun and a gas canister, who intruded President Trump’s home. Federal law enforcement are working 24/7 to keep our country safe and protect all Americans. It’s shameful and reckless that Democrats have chosen to shut down their Department.”

    FBI asks neighbors for help

    The FBI asked area residents who live near Mar-a-Lago to check any security cameras they may have for footage that could help investigators.

    FBI Director Kash Patel said in post on X that the bureau would be “dedicating all necessary resources” to the investigation.

    This story will be updated as more details emerge.

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  • NC man with shotgun fatally shot by Secret Service at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort

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    An armed North Carolina man was shot and killed by law enforcement Sunday after driving into the secured perimeter of President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, authorities say.

    The man was in his early 20s and had a gas can and shotgun with him, Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said in a news briefing Sunday morning.

    Trump and First Lady Melania Trump, who often spend weekends at Mar-a-Lago, were at the White House on Sunday, Secret Service officials said.

    A Moore County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson identified the man as Austin Tucker Martin, 21, of Cameron, North Carolina.

    Martin’s family had posted a flyer on social media Saturday in an attempt to find him. He was last seen around 8 p.m. Saturday, according to the flyer.

    The Moore County Sheriff’s Office said a relative of Martin’s approached a deputy at a local business around 1:38 a.m. Sunday to report Martin missing. Martin’s name was entered into a national missing person database, the sheriff’s office said in a news release.

    Federal authorities also got in touch with the Moore County Sheriff’s Office, which turned over all information about the case to the federal agencies investigating the incident, the release said. Martin did not have any prior contact with the Moore County Sheriff’s Office, it said, and the agency is not involved in the federal investigation.

    The release directed all other questions to the FBI Miami Field Office and the U.S. Secret Service.

    Federal officials have said Martin entered the Mar-a-Lago grounds through the north gate around 1:30 a.m. Sunday. He was confronted by two Secret Service agents and a Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputy, Bradshaw said. They shot and killed Martin, he said.

    “He was ordered to drop those two pieces of equipment that he had with them. At which time, he put down the gas can, raised the shotgun to a shooting position,” Bradshaw said at a brief press conference. The agents and the deputy “fired their weapons and neutralized the threat.”

    President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump were at the White House when a man was shot and killed Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, after driving into the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Secret Service officials said.
    President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump were at the White House when a man was shot and killed Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, after driving into the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Secret Service officials said. © Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

    No motive yet for Martin, an artist

    Martin was a 2023 graduate of Union Pines High School, who registered to vote as unaffiliated in 2022, state records show. He was an illustrator, specializing in landscapes and works featuring golf courses, according to his Instagram page.

    His 23-year-old sister, Caitlin Martin, was killed in a 2023 car crash. According to her obituary, he is survived by his parents and a brother.

    Brandon Huneycutt, head golf professional at the Quail Ridge Golf Course in Sanford, said he briefly met Martin several months ago, when Martin asked if he could “go onto some of the holes to try to get a vision … before he drew it.” They gave him a golf cart, so he could help himself, Huneycutt said.

    “I guess he took pictures of them, and he went home and actually hand-drew the pictures. They’re pretty good pieces,” Huneycutt said. They still have framed photos of some of the drawings at the course, he said.

    Investigators think Martin picked up the shotgun as he headed south to Florida, according to Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service.

    A box for the weapon was found in the vehicle after the incident, he said.

    The agents have been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation, Guglielmi said in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

    No law enforcement officers were injured, said Special Agent in Charge Rafael Barros, with the Secret Service’s Miami field office.

    The FBI is assisting with the investigation, officials said. No motive has been announced.

    Previous Trump assassination attempts

    Trump has faced threats before, including an assassination attempt during a July 2024 campaign stop in Butler, Pennsylvania. The gunman in that attempt was shot and killed.

    In September 2024, Ryan Wesley Routh, 59, was arrested in a second attempted assassination. Routh, a North Carolina native, was found hiding with what appeared to be an AK 47-style rifle in the shrubbery outside a fence at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida.

    He was sentenced Feb. 4 to life in prison.

    This story was originally published February 22, 2026 at 11:49 AM.

    Related Stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    Tammy Grubb

    The News & Observer

    Tammy Grubb has written about Orange County’s politics, people and government since 2010. She is a UNC-Chapel Hill alumna and has lived and worked in the Triangle for over 30 years.

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  • Supreme Court ruling against Trump’s tariffs leaves Mexico in cautious wait-and-see mode

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    Mexico’s secretary of the economy, Marcelo Ebrard, urged “prudence” Friday in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling invalidating part of President Trump’s sweeping tariff regimen.

    “We have to see where this is going,” Ebrard told reporters. “We have to see what measures [Washington] is going to take to figure out how it is going to affect our country. “

    Amid widespread concern about tariffs in Mexico—the United States major commercial partner, with almost $1 trillion in annual two-way trade—Ebrard cautioned: “I tell you to put yourselves in Zen mode. As tranquil as possible.”

    Across the globe, nations were assessing how the high court’s ruling might affect them. Some world leaders expressed relief or satisfaction with Friday’s decision.

    “The justices have shown that even a US president does not operate in a legal vacuum. Legal boundaries have been set, the era of unlimited, arbitrary tariffs may now be coming to an end,” wrote Bernd Lange, chair of the European Parliament’s International Trade Committee, on X.

    Also writing on X, Canada’s trade minister, Dominic LeBlanc, referred to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which the Supreme Court improperly used to impose tariffs: “The United States Supreme Court’s decision reinforces Canada’s position that the IEEPA tariffs imposed by the United States are unjustified.”

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, in her daily news conference, diplomatically made a no-comment when asked about the tariffs. “We’ll review the resolution carefully and then gladly give our opinion,” she said.

    Ebrard, her economy secretary, plans to travel to the United States next week to clarify matters, he said.

    Last year, Ebrard noted, Mexico managed to stave off Trump’s threats to impose a 25% across-the-board levy on all Mexican imports.

    However, Mexico has been pushing back against Trump administration tariffs on imports of vehicles, steel and aluminum, among other products.

    Among other impacts, the Supreme Court voided so-called fentanyl tariffs on Mexico, China and Canada. The Trump administration imposed those levies in a bid to force the three nations to crack down on trafficking of the deadly synthetic opioid.

    In the aftermath of Friday’s ruling, Trump said he planned to seek alternate legal avenues to impose now-stricken tariffs.

    About 85% of Mexican exports to the United States are exempt from tariffs because of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. The signature accord extended a mostly free-trade regimen between the three nations, replacing the previous North American Free Trade Agreement.

    The three-way pact is scheduled for joint review starting July 1. That date marks six years since the agreement was signed during the first Trump presidential term.

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    Patrick J. McDonnell

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  • In Context: Here’s what Obama said about aliens

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    President Donald Trump said Thursday he will direct multiple U.S. government agencies to declassify files related to aliens and UFOs.  

    The move came five days after former President Barack Obama sparked interest in the topic by saying aliens are real.

    Obama made the comments in a Feb. 14 interview with political commentator and podcaster Brian Tyler Cohen, who asked Obama a lightning round of questions, including whether aliens are real. Obama’s answer in the affirmative quickly went viral on social media. 

    Aboard  Air Force One Feb. 19, Fox News senior White House correspondent Peter Doocy asked Trump: “So aliens are real?”

    “Well, I don’t know if they’re real or not,” Trump said. “I can tell you (Obama) gave classified information. He’s not supposed to be doing that. He made a big mistake. He took it out of classified information.”

    Doocy then said Trump, as president, can declassify anything he wants to. 

    “I may get him out of trouble by declassifying it,” Trump responded, referring to Obama.

    Hours later, Trump said on Truth Social he would do just that.

    “Based on the tremendous interest shown, I will be directing the Secretary of War, and other relevant Departments and Agencies, to begin the process of identifying and releasing Government files related to alien and extraterrestrial life, unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), and unidentified flying objects (UFOs),” Trump’s Feb. 19 post read. 

    Here are Obama’s comments during Cohen’s speed-round interview, when the former president answered several questions in a short period of time.

    Cohen: “So I want to do a little bit of a lightning round here, because it’s not often I’ll get access to the president of the United States. So a couple questions here. Are aliens real?”

    Obama: “They’re real, but I haven’t seen them, and they’re not being kept in, what is it?”

    Cohen: “Area 51?”

    Obama: “Area 51. There’s no underground facility, unless there’s this enormous conspiracy, and they hid it from the president of the United States.”

    Declassified documents released in 2013 during Obama’s presidency acknowledged the existence of Area 51, saying that the secret government space was used as an aerial testing ground for U.S. government projects.

    Obama clarified his podcast remarks on social media, saying, “I was trying to stick with the spirit of the speed round, but since it’s gotten attention let me clarify. Statistically, the universe is so vast that the odds are good there’s life out there. But the distances between solar systems are so great that the chances we’ve been visited by aliens is low, and I saw no evidence during my presidency that extraterrestrials have made contact with us. Really!”

    While not discovered, there’s a possibility that there could be life on other planets; NASA researchers said in August 2025 that they found a long-lasting source of chemical energy in the ancient past of planet Ceres that could have made it possible for microorganisms to survive. NASA noted that this doesn’t mean that Ceres had life, but that there was likely “food” available should life have ever arisen on Ceres. 

    In 2024 the Pentagon’s UFO office, called the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, said it found “no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technologies.”

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  • Justices strike down law Trump used to impose wide tariffs

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    In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court ruled that President Donald Trump cannot use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to levy tariffs on his own, blocking the primary tool he’s been using to reshape the U.S. and global economy.

    In a 6-3 decision, the court ruled that “when Congress grants the power to impose tariffs, it does so clearly and with careful constraints. It did neither in IEEPA.”

    Trump had justified his most far-reaching assertions of tariff power by citing IEEPA, a 1977 law that allows tariffs on all imports during an “unusual and extraordinary threat … to the national security, foreign policy or economy of the United States.”

    Trump will still be able to levy tariffs using other laws, but these generally require more complicated processes. 

    “Trump cannot raise tariffs on his own, anywhere he pleases, any longer — that’s the biggest takeaway from SCOTUS this morning,” Ross Burkhart, a Boise State University political scientist who specializes in trade policy, said Feb. 20. Trump can still pursue his America First agenda, Burkhart said, but “he just has to convince more audiences of the national security threat than just himself and his advisors.”

    The court’s decision would seem to end: the minimum 10% tariff Trump levied on most trading partners during his April 2025 “Liberation Day” announcement; higher rates that Trump misleadingly described as “reciprocal” tariffs for certain trading partners; the tariffs linked to drug trafficking on Canada, Mexico and China; and many of the tariffs placed on China, experts said.

    These tariffs have been the main drivers of Trump’s second term increases in tariff revenues. ​​Since January 2025, the U.S. has seen an increase over the existing tariff baseline of $223.5 billion.

    Still in play for the administration would be other types of tariffs, including:

    • Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows tariffs when the president determines that a foreign country “is unjustifiable and burdens or restricts United States commerce” through violations of trade agreements;

    • Section 232 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act, which lets the president impose tariffs if national security is threatened. Trump and President Joe Biden used Section 232 as the basis for steel and aluminum tariffs imposed since 2018;

    • Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows the president to address “large and serious” balance-of-payments deficits through import surcharges, quotas, or a combination;

    • Section 338 of the 1930 Tariff Act, which authorizes tariffs of up to 50% if a country “discriminates” against U.S. commerce.

    “Even without IEEPA, the president retains ample statutory authority to quickly recreate much of the current trade policy chaos,” wrote the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank skeptical of Trump’s tariff policy.

    Trump learned of the decision during a meeting with governors at the White House, The New York Times reported. Citing two people familiar with the proceedings, the Times reported that Trump called the decision a “disgrace” and left the meeting early.

    The Constitution says Congress holds the power to impose tariffs, not the president. However, over the years, Congress has passed multiple laws ceding some of that power to the president. 

    One of those was IEEPA, but small businesses challenged that position in court, making two key arguments. They contended that the law doesn’t explicitly let the president impose tariffs. And they argued that the tariffs didn’t rise to the level of an “unusual and extraordinary” emergency. The plaintiffs succeeded at the trial and appeals level, and now have convinced the Supreme Court as well.

    Left unclear are how and when the billions in tariffs collected will be refunded; in the dissenting opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, joined by justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, wrote that this process “is likely” to be a “mess.”  

    RELATED: Year of the Lies: Farmer says some Trump tariff statements ‘as far from the truth as you can get’

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  • US Supreme Court invalidates Trump’s tariffs under IEEPA in 6-3 ruling | Long Island Business News

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    The Blueprint:
    • The US Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that ‘s under exceeded presidential authority.
    • Chief Justice authored the majority opinion citing lack of clear congressional authorization.
    • The ruling invoked the limiting executive power on significant economic actions.
    • The decision was challenged by businesses and 12 US states, mostly Democratic-governed.

    The U.S. Supreme Court struck down Donald Trump‘s sweeping tariffs that he pursued under a law meant for use in national emergencies, handing a stinging defeat to the Republican president in a landmark opinion on Friday with major implications for the global economy.

    The justices, in a 6-3 ruling authored by conservative Chief Justice John Roberts, upheld a lower court’s decision that Trump‘s use of this 1977 law exceeded his authority. The justices ruled that the law at issue – the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA – did not grant Trump the power he claimed to impose tariffs.

    “Our task today is to decide only whether the power to “regulate … importation,” as granted to the president in IEEPA, embraces the power to impose tariffs. It does not,” Roberts wrote in the ruling, quoting the statute’s text that Trump claimed had justified his sweeping tariffs.

    The White House had no immediate comment on the ruling. Democrats and various industry groups hailed the ruling.

    Part of the Supreme Court’s majority also declared that such an interpretation would intrude on the powers of Congress and violate a legal principle called the “major questions” doctrine.

    The doctrine, embraced by the conservative justices, requires actions by the government’s executive branch of “vast economic and political significance” to be clearly authorized by Congress. The court used the doctrine to stymie some of Democratic former President Joe Biden’s key executive actions.

    Roberts, citing a prior Supreme Court ruling, wrote that “the president must ‘point to clear congressional authorization’ to justify his extraordinary assertion of the power to impose tariffs,” adding: “He cannot.”

    Roberts wrote that if Congress had intended IEEPA to bestow on the president “the distinct and extraordinary power to impose tariffs, it would have it would have done so expressly – as it consistently has in other tariff statutes.”

    Trump has leveraged tariffs – taxes on imported goods – as a key economic and foreign policy tool. They have been central to a global trade war that Trump initiated after he began his second term as president, one that has alienated trading partners, affected financial markets and caused global economic uncertainty.

    The Supreme Court reached its conclusion in a legal challenge by businesses affected by the tariffs and 12 U.S. states, most of them Democratic-governed, against Trump‘s unprecedented use of this law to unilaterally impose the import taxes.

    The three dissenting justices were conservatives Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh. Joining Roberts in the majority were conservative Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, both of whom Trump appointed during his first term in office, along with the three liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

    The liberal justices did not join the part of the opinion invoking the major questions doctrine.

    The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, previously had backed Trump in a series of other decisions issued on an emergency basis since he returned to the presidency in January 2025 after his policies were impeded by lower courts.

    Trump‘s tariffs were forecast to generate over the next decade trillions of dollars in revenue for the United States, which possesses the world’s largest economy.

    Trump‘s administration has not provided tariffs collection data since December 14. But Penn-Wharton Budget Model economists estimated on Friday that the amount collected in Trump‘s tariffs based on IEEPA stood at more than $175 billion. And that amount likely would need to be refunded with a Supreme Court ruling against the IEEPA-based tariffs.

    POWERS OF CONGRESS

    The U.S. Constitution grants Congress, not the president, the authority to issue taxes and tariffs. But Trump instead turned to a statutory authority by invoking IEEPA to impose the tariffs on nearly every U.S. trading partner without the approval of Congress. Trump has imposed some additional tariffs under other laws that are not at issue in this case. Based on government data from October to mid-December, those represent about third of the revenue from Trump-imposed tariffs.

    IEEPA lets a president regulate commerce in a national emergency. Trump became the first president to use IEEPA to impose tariffs, one of the many ways he has aggressively pushed the boundaries of executive authority since he returned to office in areas as varied as his crackdown on immigration, the firing of federal agency officials, domestic military deployments and military operations overseas.

    Kavanaugh, who also was appointed by Trump during his first term as president, in a written dissent said that IEEPA’s text, as well as history and prior Supreme Court rulings supported the Trump administration’s position.

    “Like quotas and embargoes, tariffs are a traditional and common tool to regulate importation,” wrote Kavanaugh, whose dissenting opinion was joined by Thomas and Alito.

    “The tariffs at issue here may or may not be wise policy,” Kavanaugh added. “But as a matter of text, history, and precedent, they are clearly lawful. I respectfully dissent.”

    Kavanaugh also said the decision could impact current trade deals.

    “Because IEEPA tariffs have helped facilitate trade deals worth trillions of dollars—including with foreign nations from China to the United Kingdom to Japan, the Court’s decision could generate uncertainty regarding various trade agreements,” Kavanaugh wrote.

    Trump described the tariffs as vital for U.S. economic security, predicting that the country would be defenseless and ruined without them. Trump in November told reporters that without his tariffs “the rest of the world would laugh at us because they’ve used tariffs against us for years and took advantage of us.” Trump said the United States was abused by other countries including China, the second-largest economy.

    Candace Laing, president and CEO of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said the decision was a legal ruling, not a reset of U.S. .

    “Canada should prepare for new, blunter mechanisms to be used to reassert trade pressure, potentially with broader and more disruptive effects,” Laing said in a statement.

    After the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case in November, Trump said he would consider alternatives if it ruled against him on tariffs, telling reporters that “we’ll have to develop a ‘game two’ plan.”

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other administration officials said the United States would invoke other legal justifications to retain as many of Trump‘s tariffs as possible. Among others, these include a statutory provision that permits tariffs on imported goods that threaten U.S. national security and another that allows retaliatory actions including tariffs against trading partners that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative determines have used unfair trade practices against American exporters.

    None of these alternatives offered the flexibility and blunt-force dynamics that IEEPA provided Trump, and may not be able to replicate the full scope of his tariffs in a timely fashion.

    Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer called the decision a “victory for the wallets of every American consumer,” adding: Trump‘s illegal tariff tax just collapsed. He tried to govern by decree and stuck families with the bill. Enough chaos. End the trade war.”

    Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren said the ruling left many questions unanswered.

    “The Court has struck down these destructive tariffs, but there is no legal mechanism for consumers and many small businesses to recoup the money they have already paid. Instead, giant corporations with their armies of lawyers and lobbyists can sue for tariff refunds, then just pocket the money for themselves,” Warren said.

    INCREASED LEVERAGE

    Trump‘s ability to impose tariffs instantaneously on any trading partner’s goods under the aegis of some form of declared national emergency raised his leverage over other countries. It brought world leaders scrambling to Washington to secure trade deals that often included pledges of billions of dollars in investments or other offers of enhanced market access for U.S. companies.

    But Trump‘s use of tariffs as a cudgel in U.S. foreign policy has succeeded in antagonizing numerous countries, including those long considered among the closest U.S. allies.

    IEEPA historically had been used for imposing sanctions on enemies or freezing their assets, not to impose tariffs. The law does not specifically mention the word tariffs. Trump‘s Justice Department had argued that IEEPA allows tariffs by authorizing the president to “regulate” imports to address emergencies.

    The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that if all current tariffs stay in place, including the IEEPA-based duties, they would generate about $300 billion annually over the next decade.

    Total U.S. net customs duty receipts reached a record $195 billion in fiscal 2025, which ended on September 30, according to U.S. Treasury Department data.

    On April 2 on a date Trump labeled “Liberation Day,” the president announced what he called “reciprocal” tariffs on goods imported from most U.S. trading partners, invoking IEEPA to address what he called a national emergency related to U.S. trade deficits, though the United States already had run trade deficits for decades.

    In February and March of 2025, Trump invoked IEEPA to impose tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico, citing the trafficking of the often-abused painkiller fentanyl and illicit drugs into the United States as a national emergency.

    EXTRACTING CONCESSIONS

    Trump has wielded his tariffs to extract concessions and renegotiate trade deals, and as a weapon to punish countries that draw his ire on non-trade political matters. These have ranged from Brazil’s prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro, India’s purchases of Russian oil that help fund Russia’s war in Ukraine, and an anti-tariffs ad by Canada’s Ontario province.

    IEEPA was passed by Congress and signed by Democratic President Jimmy Carter. In passing the measure, Congress placed additional limits on the president’s authority compared to a predecessor law.

    The cases on tariffs before the justices involved three lawsuits.

    The Washington-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit sided with five small businesses that import goods in one challenge, and the states of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Vermont in another.

    Separately, a Washington-based federal judge sided with a family-owned toy company called Learning Resources.


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  • Trump-appointed arts panel approves his White House ballroom proposal

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    The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, a panel made up of President Donald Trump’s appointees, on Thursday approved his proposal to build a ballroom larger than the White House itself where the East Wing once stood.The meeting was supposed to be on the design, with a final vote expected at next month’s session. But the chairman, Rodney Mims Cook Jr., made a motion to also vote on final approval, and six of the seven commissioners who were all installed by the Republican president since the start of the year voted in favor twice. One commissioner, James McCrery, did not vote because he was the initial architect on the project.“Our sitting president has actually designed a very beautiful structure,” Cook said before the voting. “The United States just should not be entertaining the world in tents.”Cook echoed one of Trump’s arguments for adding a ballroom to the White House: It would end the long-standing practice of erecting temporary structures that Trump calls tents on the South Lawn to host visiting dignitaries for state dinners and other functions.Cook said no other president had taken steps to correct that “until President Trump.”The project will be the subject of additional discussion by the National Capital Planning Commission in March.At the fine art’s commission’s January meeting, some commissioners questioned the lead architect about the “immense” design and scale of the project even as they broadly endorsed Trump’s vision for a ballroom roughly twice the size of the White House itself.Some changes suggested at that meeting were made and were welcomed by the commissioners on Thursday.Trump’s decision in October to demolish the East Wing prompted a public outcry when it began without the independent reviews, congressional approval and public comment that are typical even for relatively minor modifications to historic buildings in Washington.The National Trust for Historic Preservation has sued in federal court to halt construction of the ballroom. A court decision in the case is pending.The project is scheduled for additional discussion at a March 5 meeting of the National Capital Planning Commission, which is led by one of Trump’s top White House aides. The commission has jurisdiction over construction and major renovations to government buildings in the region.___This story has been corrected to reflect that the ballroom was approved by six of the seven commissioners and that one commissioner did not vote because he was the initial architect on the project.

    The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, a panel made up of President Donald Trump’s appointees, on Thursday approved his proposal to build a ballroom larger than the White House itself where the East Wing once stood.

    The meeting was supposed to be on the design, with a final vote expected at next month’s session. But the chairman, Rodney Mims Cook Jr., made a motion to also vote on final approval, and six of the seven commissioners who were all installed by the Republican president since the start of the year voted in favor twice. One commissioner, James McCrery, did not vote because he was the initial architect on the project.

    “Our sitting president has actually designed a very beautiful structure,” Cook said before the voting. “The United States just should not be entertaining the world in tents.”

    Cook echoed one of Trump’s arguments for adding a ballroom to the White House: It would end the long-standing practice of erecting temporary structures that Trump calls tents on the South Lawn to host visiting dignitaries for state dinners and other functions.

    Cook said no other president had taken steps to correct that “until President Trump.”

    The project will be the subject of additional discussion by the National Capital Planning Commission in March.

    At the fine art’s commission’s January meeting, some commissioners questioned the lead architect about the “immense” design and scale of the project even as they broadly endorsed Trump’s vision for a ballroom roughly twice the size of the White House itself.

    Some changes suggested at that meeting were made and were welcomed by the commissioners on Thursday.

    Trump’s decision in October to demolish the East Wing prompted a public outcry when it began without the independent reviews, congressional approval and public comment that are typical even for relatively minor modifications to historic buildings in Washington.

    The National Trust for Historic Preservation has sued in federal court to halt construction of the ballroom. A court decision in the case is pending.

    The project is scheduled for additional discussion at a March 5 meeting of the National Capital Planning Commission, which is led by one of Trump’s top White House aides. The commission has jurisdiction over construction and major renovations to government buildings in the region.

    ___

    This story has been corrected to reflect that the ballroom was approved by six of the seven commissioners and that one commissioner did not vote because he was the initial architect on the project.

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  • After being called a ‘traitor,’ Marjorie Taylor Greene doubles down on Trump in a way no one saw coming | The Mary Sue

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    Former United States Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has been quite vocal about her views over the past few months, both during and after her time in office. While she primarily adopted an “America first” stance throughout her tenure, her focus shifted towards criticising Donald Trump towards the end and afterwards, particularly regarding the Jeffrey Epstein case, where she experienced significant disagreement with him.

    Marjorie Taylor Greene is still holding grudges against United States President Donald Trump, even after stepping back from her role, and rightly so. The sheer number of controversial actions Don the Con has taken during just one year of his presidency is mind-boggling, and not in a good way. That being said, although his policies may have adversely affected many Americans, on a personal level, he has also impacted his former friend, Marjorie Taylor Greene. In a recently released no-holds-barred interview, she expressed her true feelings about Trump, including the hurt she felt after being called a “traitor”, which created numerous challenges for her and her family.

    Marjorie Taylor Greene reveals that the “traitor” title given to her by Trump resulted in her and her family members getting death threats

    On Sunday, Marjorie Taylor Greene made an appearance on the Keeping It Real podcast, hosted by Jillian Michaels, and discussed the Jeffrey Epstein case in detail. In a specific moment from the interview, which is going viral on social media, including platforms like X (formerly Twitter), Greene can be seen discussing the implications of being sidelined and publicly scrutinised by Donald Trump.

    Highlighting how easy it was for her to decide to side with victims of sexual abuse in the Jeffrey Epstein case, Greene spoke about the pushback she received from Trump. She particularly spotlighted his Truth Social post in which he called her a “traitor”, which later resulted in her receiving death threats. She also disclosed that the threats did not stop at her, as her other family members also received the same, including her son, making it necessary for her to report the case to the authorities.

    Marjorie Taylor Greene reveals that Trump showed zero empathy when she told him about her son receiving death threats

    During her appearance on the Keeping It Real podcast, Marjorie Taylor Greene spoke about the responses she got from people after she divulged that she and her family members were receiving death threats. She said that he forwarded the death threat her son received to Trump, JD Vance, Kash Patel, Susie Wiles, and James Blair, along with the message that she was receiving it as a result of Trump calling her a “traitor.”

    Greene states that while Kash Patel and JD Vance were responsive, she didn’t hear a word from Susie Wiles and James Blair. As for Trump, she shared that he had “no compassion” and pinned everything on her and insinuated that it was her fault that her son was getting death threats. Talking about Trump’s comments during the time, Greene said, “…basically saying, ‘If your son gets killed, it’s your own fault, and you deserve it.”

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Sanchari Ghosh

    Sanchari Ghosh is a political writer for The Mary Sue who enjoys keeping up with what’s going on in the world and sometimes reminding everyone what they should be talking about. She’s been around for a few years, but still gets excited whenever she disentangles a complicated story. When she’s not writing, she’s likely sleeping, eating, daydreaming, or just hanging out with friends. Politics is her passion, but so is an amazing nap.

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    Sanchari Ghosh

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  • Carlos Watson Sought Mercy on X. Todd Chrisley Turned to Jesus. Everybody Went to Giuliani or Dershowitz. Inside Trump’s Wild West Wing Pardon System

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    After the verdict, his daughter Savannah spent $460,000 to hire Alex Little, from the Tennessee law firm of Litson, to navigate an appeal and potential pardon petition. Having previously worked at the International Criminal Court and former president Jimmy Carter’s peace initiatives in Africa, with a brief stint as a CIA analyst, Little was not an obvious choice to build a powerful network among MAGA Republicans. But his work on a case involving Amazon had seemingly impressed Jim Trusty, who later defended Trump against charges of mishandling classified documents. And during Little’s defense of Brian Kelsey, a Tennessee state senator charged with violating campaign finance laws, he encountered David Warrington, who also worked for Kelsey and subsequently became Trump’s White House counsel. After Trump resumed power, Little submitted a clemency petition for Kelsey, who was pardoned just weeks after his sentence began. Little, long an appeals lawyer, quickly became a pardon-focused attorney, telling VF the “real problems” in Chrisley’s original conviction appeared unusual in such a high-profile prosecution. “Going into the appellate argument, we had very, very strong cases on multiple fronts.”

    “As we sort of click off the contingencies, it’s like being a pilot,” explains Little. “Where’s the first place you’re going to land? If that place doesn’t work, where’s the second place you’re going to land? If you got to land in a field, you got to land in a field, but we’re going to get you home safe.”

    But Todd Chrisley’s appeal looked set to drag on, and Savannah grew impatient. She started working the phones, pleading her parents’ innocence, even speaking at the 2024 Republican National Convention about “rogue prosecutors” and “the Democrats’ corruption.” After more than two years in prison and $4.2 million in legal fees, Chrisley himself grew used to his life inside. He secretly used multiple cell phones, enjoyed a large commissary account, and thanks to his influence and education, developed an intense desire to push back against the capriciousness, incompetence, and occasional cruelty of prison authorities.

    Eventually, Savannah’s appeals to Trump bore fruit. A video from late last May shows Trump on an Oval Office speakerphone, informing her that within a day her parents would be “free and clean” after their “harsh treatment.” Hours later, the legal nightmare that began for Chrisley at a luxury Los Angeles hotel ended in a Pensacola, Florida, prison. He handed other prisoners all his spare gear—“You’re only allowed to have two pairs of tennis shoes; I had seven. You’re only allowed to have two sweat suits; I had 11. You’re only allowed to spend $360 a month on commissary; I spent $2,000”—and walked out.

    While inside, he’d pushed to see his prison camp shuttered, and he now says improving inmate conditions and reducing America’s recidivism rate has provided him with “a purpose-driven life.” The presidential pardon power can “right a wrong” and “gives those that are incarcerated hope,” Chrisley told VF. “President Trump has been the answer to a lot of people’s hope in this country.”

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    Willem Marx

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