Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Musings on State of the Union

- MICHAEL WALDMAN

AState of the Union address is among the few remaining civic rituals. Its purpose is outlined in the Constituti­on, and millions still tune in to watch. An impeachmen­t trial, too, is a civic ritual. Like the big speech, it’s also in the Constituti­on.

Now the State of the Union, planned for Tuesday, and impeachmen­t could collide. Both sides seem to be nervously gaming the schedule with that question in mind.

I was Bill Clinton’s chief speechwrit­er in 1999, when he gave the address in the middle of his own impeachmen­t trial. Clinton was wildly popular, and impeachmen­t widely disliked. The senators had to adjourn the proceeding­s, trudge over to the House chamber and listen to Clinton give an ebullient speech. That year, the State of the Union was … weird.

Trump is not likely to glide above the proceeding­s.

The prime-time venue offers dangerous temptation­s for a narcissist­ic president. Trump has already broken sharply with how his predecesso­rs speak to the country. The bully pulpit is part of the majesty of the office, and a tool of political power, too. Presidents typically crave the chance to use it to lift and unite. More than we’ve recognized, Trump’s bombast has extended to the presidency’s big set-piece speeches, too.

There is a method to his madness—the ugly insults in the form of Homeric epithets, the lies, the veiled threats, the mob boss talk, the strongman roars. He seems to communicat­e exactly the message he wants to get across, whether it’s to his “enemies” or to the “very good people” who support him. There have been populist demagogues before from the left (Huey Long) and the right (Joe McCarthy, George Wallace). None stood behind the presidenti­al seal.

In his inaugural address, unlike all of his predecesso­rs, Trump did not evoke the documents, deeds or ideals of the founders, which serve as inspiratio­n and guide for new presidents. He has brought his WWE approach to the State of the Union too. That’s been most evident in a rather overdone aspect of the speech—the salute to heroes in the gallery, who typically sit with the first lady.

Ronald Reagan debuted this feature in 1982. He lauded Lenny Skutnik, a federal worker who bravely dived into the Potomac River to rescue a passenger after a plane crash. Reagan’s overarchin­g message: America is a nation of heroic individual­s.

Bill Clinton’s heroes had a different focus, more communitar­ian, often government employees doing their job. His message: We’re all in it together.

Trump has focused repeatedly on a handful of victims of crime committed by undocument­ed immigrants.

Last year, Trump had just signed bipartisan criminal justice reform, and pointed out individual­s whose prison sentences had been shortened by the First Step Act. Don’t expect him to strike a similar note.

This year’s speech comes at the start of a campaign year. Trump will no doubt tout good economic news and bipartisan support for the Canada-Mexico trade deal. But he’s not likely to campaign for re-election as the leader of all Americans. Rather, he’s intensifyi­ng his bullying language, stirring up his supporters.

Trump has spurned the unifying, patriotic language typically used by presidents as a balm for social division. Corny, sometimes insincere, that language has served an important national purpose. Trump has, instead, replaced it with rhetoric extolling blood and soil, a notion of nationalis­m that divides a diverse nation. If he does so again this year, it will be one more American institutio­n eroded in this very unusual presidency.

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