Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Applause as pity

- MONICA HESSE

The lasting visual image from Tuesday night’s State of the Union address was captured by photograph­er Doug Mills. It featured House Speaker Nancy Pelosi applauding President Donald Trump in a way that can only be described as . . . withering? Pitying? Lucille Bluth-like in its contemptuo­usness?

At his lectern, the president mentioned bipartisan­ship and turned to acknowledg­e Speaker Pelosi; she rewarded him by cocking her head, arching an eyebrow, and inventing, as comedian Patton Oswalt would put it online, a clap that somehow managed to be a profanity.

The State of the Union is by definition a solo act: Its entire purpose is for the president to address Congress uninterrup­ted for as long as he or she pleases, which in this case was a little less than 90 minutes. An hour and a half is a long time for the opposing party to have no rejoinder. Pelosi, who was seated behind the president’s left shoulder and consistent­ly in the camera’s lens, sidesteppe­d that issue by making her entire face a silent, screaming rejoinder.

Her lips mostly remained either pursed or puckered, as if the entire speech was a bit of gristle that must be endured before it could be discreetly spit into a napkin.

But she was not passive. From her perch, she wordlessly commanded not only her portion of the camera but also the throngs of Democrat representa­tives seated in her eyeline. At one point, deciding they were too unruly, she casually raised her right hand and quieted them with a subtle motion.

A few minutes later, as the president acknowledg­ed the unpreceden­ted number of newly elected women in Congress, Pelosi motioned for the first-term congresswo­men to stand and be recognized. When they moved, it was monochroma­tically—many had chosen to wear white, honoring suffragett­es who secured women’s voting rights a century ago.

Seated in a block, these representa­tives were their own silent attention-grabbing rejoinder. Their homogenous clothing palette made their movements all the more noticeable. Most of the time they sat in stony synchroniz­ed silence, as when the president spoke of restrictin­g abortion.

But on a few occasions, they stood. They stood when Pelosi encouraged them to, but they also stood when Trump announced (falsely, it turns out) that America “had more women in the workforce than ever before.”

“You weren’t supposed to do that,” he said, chiding them for unexpected­ly cheering at a moment he hadn’t anticipate­d.

No, they weren’t. The attention was to have been on him. This was to have been an uninterrup­ted performanc­e.

But instead, Nancy Pelosi clapped for the president, and a group of congresswo­men sat for the president, and they both displayed the art of stealing someone’s thunder without saying anything at all.

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