The Philippine Star

Trump calls for end to ‘revenge politics’

In State of the Union address

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — US President Donald Trump urged Americans to come together 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.

“We must reject the politics of revenge, resistance, and retributio­n — and embrace the boundless potential of cooperatio­n, compromise, and the common good,” Trump told Congress and a huge television audience on Tuesday.

“We must choose between greatness or gridlock, results or resistance, vision or vengeance, incredible progress or pointless destructio­n,” Trump said in the 82-minute speech, which was littered with soaring rhetoric and interrupte­d continuous­ly by applause from his camp.

Trump defended his muscular approach to trade with China and other big partners.

He touted what he called “the hottest economy anywhere in the world,” and called for a bipartisan push to eradicate the Aids epidemic in the United states in a decade.

But the picture in the Us Congress is anything but unified two years into Trump’s presidency, with democrats controllin­g the House of Representa­tives, Republican­s in charge of the senate, and Trump finding himself stymied at every turn.

After two years of a presidency in which Trump has driven an already polarized country into bitter, even violent debate over almost every aspect of politics, his words likely fell on many deaf ears.

The moment Trump swung onto his favorite topic of building a wall on the Mexican border to stop what he called an “onslaught” of illegal immigrants, democrats shook their heads and became restless.

Trump’s single-minded drive — and failure — to get congressio­nal funding for that wall is at the heart of the division that his speech claimed to be trying to resolve.

democrats say that Trump’s warnings about illegal immigrant murderers amount to political fearmonger­ing and they refuse to give approval.

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 presidenti­al elections.

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.

On Tuesday, when Trump delivered the traditiona­l line that “the state of our union is strong,” Pelosi just slightly shook her head in disagreeme­nt.

she frequently checked her copy of the president’s speech as he delivered, grimacing at some lines, placidly skimming others.

she visibly scoffed in disbelief when Trump said only “politics or ridiculous partisan investigat­ions” can slow down the “economic miracle” of the Us.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi reacts alongside Vice President Mike Pence as he applauds US President Donald Trump during the second State of the Union address in Washington on Tuesday.
REUTERS Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi reacts alongside Vice President Mike Pence as he applauds US President Donald Trump during the second State of the Union address in Washington on Tuesday.

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