Toronto Star

President’s address may face skepticism

Expected call for unity in State of the Union speech shows weakened standing

- JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON— The White House says President Donald Trump will call for optimism and unity in Tuesday’s State of the Union address, using the moment to attempt a reset after two years of bitter partisansh­ip and deeply personal attacks. But will anyone buy it? Skepticism will emanate from both sides of the aisle when Trump enters the House chamber for the primetime address to lawmakers and the nation. Democrats, emboldened after the midterm elections and the recent shutdown fight, see little evidence of a president willing to compromise. And even the president’s staunchest allies know that bipartisan rhetoric read off a teleprompt­er is usually undermined by scorching tweets and unpredicta­ble policy manoeuvres.

Still, the fact that Trump’s advisers feel a need to try a different approach is a tacit acknowledg­ement that the president’s standing is weakened as he begins his third year in office.

The shutdown left some Republican­s frustrated over his insistence on a border wall, something they warned him the new Democratic House majority would not bend on. Trump’s approval rating during the shutdown dipped to 34 per cent, down from 42 per cent a month earlier, according to a recent survey conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. White House counsellor Kellyanne Conway said the president would use his address “to call for an end to the politics of resistance, retributio­n.”

Officials said the president is also expected to highlight infrastruc­ture, trade and prescripti­on drug pricing as areas in which the parties could work together.

But Washington’s most recent debate offered few signs of cooperatio­n between Trump and Democrats. Under pressure from conservati­ve backers, Trump refused to sign a government funding bill that did not include money for his longsought border wall. With hundreds of thousands of Americans missing paycheque s, Trump ultimately agreed to reopen the government for three weeks to allow negotiatio­ns on border security to continue.

With the new Feb. 15 funding deadline looming, Trump is expected to use his address to outline his demands, which still include funding for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

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