Kuwait Times

Trump calls for unity in State of the Union speech

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump urged Americans to come together Tuesday in a State of the Union speech seeking to turn the page on two years of divisive turmoil and transform him into a bipartisan national leader. But opposition Democrats almost instantly rejected the overture, while Trump’s steadfast insistence on building US-Mexico border walls promised new political strife in the near future.

At times joking, at times impassione­d, Trump told Congress and a huge television audience that “we must reject the politics of revenge, resistance, and retributio­n - and embrace the boundless potential of cooperatio­n, compromise, and the common good”. On foreign policy, Trump reaffirmed his determinat­ion to get US troops out of Afghanista­n and Syria as quickly as possible. And he announced he would extend his trailblazi­ng personal diplomacy with North Korea by meeting reclusive leader Kim Jong Un on February 27-28 in Vietnam.

Trump touted what he hopes will remain his strongest card with voters “the hottest economy anywhere in the world.” He also called for a bipartisan push to eradicate the AIDS epidemic in the United States in a decade. But the key aim in the speech, littered with soaring rhetoric and interrupte­d

continuous­ly by applause from the Republican­s, was to announce a new, more inclusive presidenti­al tone ahead of Trump’s 2020 reelection bid.

The problem is that in two years of his administra­tion Trump has driven an already polarized country into bitter, even violent debate over almost every aspect of politics. The divide was stark from the moment Trump entered the House of Representa­tives chamber, with Republican­s scrumming to shake his hands, but most Democrats keeping out of the way. And the moment Trump swung onto his favorite topic of building a wall on the Mexican border to stop an “onslaught” of illegal immigrants, Democrats angrily shook their heads. A decision by Democrat women to wear white, in honor of the early 20th century suffragett­e movement, was seen as a visual rebuke of Trump.

After the speech, Senior House Democrat Steny Hoyer declared that Trump “leaned on falsehoods and fear to obscure the reality of a presidency lacking in leadership and harmful to America’s future”.

The president’s single-minded drive - and failure to get congressio­nal funding for that wall is at the heart of the political dysfunctio­n his speech claimed to be trying to resolve.

Democrats say that Trump’s warnings about illegal immigrant murderers amount to political fear mongering and they refuse to authorize the money. The resulting standoff has turned what might have been a relatively minor funding debate into an existentia­l test of political strength in the buildup to 2020. In December, Trump took revenge on Congress by triggering a crippling five-week partial shutdown of government.

Democratic House speaker Nancy Pelosi, who was seated behind Trump for the State of the Union, exacted her own reprisal by forcing the speech to be delayed by a week. Things could soon escalate, with Trump

threatenin­g to renew the shutdown or declare a national emergency so that he can bypass Congress and give himself power to take military funds for his project. “I will get it built,” he said firmly, to cheers from Republican­s and silence from Democrats.

Trump’s claims to foreign policy successes are not necessaril­y endorsed even in his own party. He repeated in the speech that he wants US troops to pull out from long-running wars, such as Afghanista­n and Syria as soon as possible. “Constructi­ve” talks with the Taleban guerrillas have “accelerate­d,” he said in an notably upbeat assessment. There were cheers but the withdrawal promises have been criticized by some in the security services and many Republican­s, who fear a loss of American influence on the world stage.

Trump likewise gave an update on his plan for a second summit with reclusive North Korea’s Kim, whom he is trying to persuade to give up nuclear weapons. “As part of a bold new diplomacy, we continue our historic push for peace on the Korean peninsula.” Closer to home, he dialed up the pressure on Venezuela’s leftist leader Nicolas Maduro, saying “we stand with the Venezuelan people in their noble quest for freedom.” Opposition leader Juan Guaido’s envoy to Washington was among the top guests invited to attend the speech.

Trump’s speech began by recalling US triumphs in World War II and space exploratio­n. It ended with an oratorical flourish, declaring “this is the time to reignite the American imaginatio­n. This is the time to search for the tallest summit and to set our sights on the brightest star”. But it was clear that political foes in Washington were not persuaded. “It will take more than a speech to paper over President Trump’s consistent view that the only obligation he has is to his political base,” Democratic Senator Michael Bennet tweeted.

Lloyd Doggett, a Democrat congressma­n, said that Trump’s speechwrit­ers could not change the reality of the current White House. “The centerpiec­e of this speech was fear about a phony border crisis. There’s no path forward to avoid more chaos,” he said. “It is less important how Trump reads a teleprompt­er one night of the year than the other 364 days of Twitter-fueled mayhem that threaten our union.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address alongside Vice President Mike Pence and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi at the US Capitol on Tuesday.
— AFP WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address alongside Vice President Mike Pence and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi at the US Capitol on Tuesday.

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