Live updates: Trump touts economy in longest State of the Union speech but Democrats say president is ‘in a bubble’ | CNN Politics

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Democrats say Trump is out of touch after his State of the Union address

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Rep. Omar tells CNN why she yelled out at Trump during the State of the Union address
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Here's the latest

• Reaction to SOTU address: President Donald Trump took a victory lap in his 2026 State of the Union speech last night, during which he touted the economy, took jabs at Democrats and briefly touched on foreign affairs. Read an annotated, fact-checked version of his speech.

• Democratic response: Democrats said the speech showed Trump is out of touch with average Americans. During the official Democratic response, Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger sharply criticized the president over affordability concerns and his immigration crackdown, offering a preview of the party’s message ahead of November’s midterms.

• Iran negotiations: Meanwhile, the US slapped new sanctions on Iran ahead of talks tomorrow in Geneva with Tehran.

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Vance says White House is "monitoring" deadly incident off Cuba's coast

Vice President JD Vance said Wednesday he’d been updated by the top US diplomat on a deadly incident involving a Florida-registered speedboat near Cuba.

“Marco (Rubio) briefed me about 15 minutes ago on it, but we don’t know a whole lot of details,” Vance said, referring to the US secretary of state, during an unrelated event at the White House.

“Certainly, you know, a situation that we’re monitoring, hopefully it’s not as bad we fear it could be. But can’t say more, because I just don’t know more,” Vance said.

He referred other questions to the White House, which has not commented on the incident.

Cuba’s interior ministry said earlier that four people in a Florida-registered speedboat were killed by Cuban forces Wednesday morning after the vessel entered Cuban territorial waters.

Trump ran a victory lap in last night's State of the Union. What lawmakers had to say

President Donald Trump delivers the first State of the Union address of his second term to a joint session of Congress in Washington, DC, on Tuesday.

President Donald Trump delivered the longest State of the Union address on record last night, in which he largely focused on the economy and took jabs at Democrats.

This is how lawmakers took it:

“Out of touch”: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Whip Katherine Clark slammed Trump as being out of touch and ignoring “real issues,” especially when it comes to affordability.

“Touching”: Republican Rep. Byron Donalds said last night’s address showed Trump is prioritizing the affordability crisis. Republican Rep. Mike Lawler said Trump used the room “effectively” with “touching moments that I think did unify the American people.”

Reaction was international, too:

Iranian criticism: Iranian spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei accused Trump of “big lies” against Iran during his speech.

In other news:

State of the Union guest arrested and released: Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar said her State of the Union guest, arrested for allegedly demonstrating during the event, has been released and is “safe.”

Iran sanctions: The Trump administration slapped sanctions on more than 30 targets tied to “illicit” Iranian oil sales and the country’s ballistic missile production ahead of talks between Washington and Tehran.

Trump lashes out: Trump issued racist attacks against Omar and Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib on TruthSocial today after they repeatedly yelled at him during his address. He said they “look like they should be institutionalized” and that “we should send them back from where they came.”

Noem threatens TSA PreCheck suspension: Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that the agency may again suspend TSA PreCheck by prioritizing “standard” security lanes at the airport, hours after Trump called for Democrats to join Republicans and refund the department.

CNN’s Rhea Mogul, Kaanita Iyer, Rebekah Riess, Alejandra Jaramillo, Manu Raju and Jennifer Hansler contributed to this report.

DOJ reviewing whether Epstein documents naming Trump were improperly withheld

A portrait of American financier Jeffrey Epstein and real estate developer Donald Trump as they pose together at the Mar-a-Lago estate, Palm Beach, Florida on February 22, 1997.

The Justice Department is reviewing whether Jeffrey Epstein-related documents mentioning President Donald Trump were improperly withheld from public releases, the department said in a statement today.

The review comes after several news outlets including CNN reported that witness interviews from the criminal trial of Epstein’s co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell appear to be missing from the massive trove of files released by the Justice Department last month, including three interviews related to a woman who accused Trump of sexually assaulting her decades ago.

The Justice Department has previously identified reasons why it would redact or withhold documents, including that they are duplicates, privileged, or are part of an ongoing federal investigation. The Justice Department has not said which instance applies to the interviews.

Many documents have also been removed and added back to the DOJ’s Epstein files website over the weeks since the initial release, CNN has reported, including some the department says were “temporarily removed for victim redactions.”

GOP senator weighs in on FBI director's trip to Winter Olympics

FBI Director Kash Patel is seen during the men's gold medal ice hockey match between the United States and Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, on Sunday.

Republican Sen. John Kennedy weighed in on FBI Director Kash Patel’s trip to Italy after images surfaced of him chugging beer in the US men’s hockey team locker room at the Olympics.

The senator from Louisiana said that public perception of government officials plays an important role.

“Given the fact that Congress is polled right up there in the minds of the American people with hemorrhoids, perceptions are important,” he said.

Democrats have also raised concerns about Patel’s Olympics trip due to his use of an FBI Gulfstream jet for personal travel. But he doesn’t have a choice: A post-9/11 government regulation requires the attorney general, and since 2011, the FBI director, to use government aircraft for all travel, including personal trips.

Kennedy also took a shot at a prominent Democrat, former US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice.

More context: Rice has come under fire by some conservatives after she said on a recent podcast that companies that bent the knee to Trump “are going to be held accountable” by those who oppose the president and “win at the ballot box.”

Over the weekend, President Donald Trump called on Netflix to remove Rice from its board “or pay the consequences” amid the company’s Warner Bros. merger bid.

Watch video of Patel celebrating with Team USA in this report from CNN’s Jake Tapper:

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FBI director faces scrutiny for partying with Team USA
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Jeffries defends Rep. Al Green protest at SOTU

Rep. Al Green protests before President Donald Trump's State of the Union on Tuesday.

Leesburg, Virginia — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries on Wednesday defended his member, Rep. Al Green of Texas, who was removed from the House chamber Tuesday night for protesting President Donald Trump’s State of the Union speech.

Green had been holding a sign reading “Black people aren’t apes!” — a reference to a racist video recently posted to Trump’s Truth Social account — when the senior Texan was forced to leave the chamber.

Asked about Green’s protest, Jeffries called it “appropriate and restrained at the same period of time.”

“His message that he communicated was obviously on point. But it was far less profane than my reaction to the very same racist video that Donald Trump felt compelled to produce,” Jeffries said, referring to his own response to Trump’s video, in which the minority leader said “f**k Donald Trump.”

Jeffries told his members that if they planned to go to the speech, they were expected to “express ourselves in a manner consistent with being in the House chamber. And that was done,” he said when asked about Green.

Top Democrats on intelligence committees demand Gabbard respond to whistleblower report

US Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a Cabinet Meeting on December 2, 2025.

The top Democrats on the Senate and House Intelligence Committees sent a letter to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard demanding answers amid scrutiny over restricted access to a whistleblower report filed last year.

The report was not transmitted to Congress until about nine months after it was filed, and top lawmakers were barred from viewing the unredacted report.

In their letter, Rep. Jim Himes and Sen. Mark Warner note that the DNI office cited executive privilege when it said it could not share the unredacted report on the incident.

“This response and assertion of privilege over this type of intelligence report is unprecedented. The request and provision of intelligence reports have been longstanding practice between the IC and its congressional oversight committees,” the lawmakers wrote.

“Moreover, it is not clear how this intelligence report could implicate executive privilege, which typically protects the deliberation and communications of the President and his senior advisors.”

They ended the letter asking whether the president asserted executive privilege, and on what grounds.

Warner addressed the whistleblower report earlier this month in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper:

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Top lawmakers review whistleblower complaint against Tulsi Gabbard
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Trump speaks with Zelensky as Ukraine war enters fifth year

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in Munich, Germany, on February 14.

President Donald Trump spoke Wednesday with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as Russia’s war in Ukraine enters its fifth year, according to a person familiar with the conversation.

The call came as Zelensky is publicly encouraging Trump to continue supporting Ukraine. He told CNN’s Clarissa Ward this week he wants the US president to “stay on our side.”

Slow-moving peace talks, mediated by Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, have so far failed to yield a peace agreement.

Trump made only a cursory mention of the Ukraine conflict in his State of the Union speech Tuesday night.

“We’re working very hard to end the ninth war, the killing and slaughter between Russia and Ukraine, where 25,000 soldiers are dying each and every month. Think of that, 25,000 soldiers are dying a month,” Trump said, before adding his frequent aside: “A war which would have never happened if I were president, would have never happened.”

In a post on X, Zelensky said envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner joined the call, and the four spoke about upcoming trilateral talks among Ukraine, the US and Russia. Zelensky expects the trilateral talks to open up an “opportunity to move talks to the leaders’ level.”

However, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said today that while he could see a summit involving Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump, and Zelensky in the event of a deal, he doesn’t see the use of a Putin-Zelensky meeting now.

Medicare trust fund projected to run dry 12 years earlier, CBO says

President Donald Trump is touting that he cut taxes on Social Security benefits, but that loss of revenue is expected to lead to a key Medicare trust fund running dry much sooner.

Medicare’s hospital insurance trust fund is forecast to run out of money in 2040, according to the Congressional Budget Office’s latest projection. That’s 12 years earlier than CBO’s most recent prior estimate.

The trust fund, which finances Medicare Part A hospital, hospice care, short-term nursing care and other services, will be depleted sooner than projected for several reasons, CBO said. The trust fund will receive less revenue from income taxes on Social Security benefits, which account for about one-eighth of the fund’s revenue, because the One Big Beautiful Bill Act reduced tax rates and created a temporary enhanced deduction to senior citizens. (The legislation did not eliminate taxes on Social Security, contrary to Trump’s claims.)

Also, CBO projects reduced revenue from payroll taxes because it forecasts workers will earn less, and it expects less interest income because of smaller trust fund balances. Meanwhile, spending is projected to be greater. These factors are also weakening the trust fund’s finances.

Iran dismisses Trump’s missile claims as “fake news,” says it seeks "fair" deal

Missiles produced by Iran's armed forces are displayed during an event to mark the anniversary of the 1979 Iranian Revolution, in Tehran on February 11.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has dismissed US President Donald Trump’s accusation that Tehran is developing missiles capable of reaching the United States, calling the claim “fake news.”

Trump, addressing Congress on Tuesday night, said Iran has “already developed missiles that can threaten Europe and our bases overseas, and they’re working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States.”

In an exclusive interview with India Today, Araghchi insisted that Iran’s missile program is strictly defensive, with self-imposed limits keeping the missiles’ ranges below 2,000 kilometers (1,242 miles).

Speaking from Tehran today ahead of a new round of talks with the US in Geneva, Araghchi said Iran is fully prepared for both war and peace but remains committed to diplomacy and a fair nuclear agreement.

“Our armed forces are prepared to do their job, and we know how to defend ourselves, and this is what we did last time,” he said, emphasizing that Iran’s preparedness serves as a deterrent.

Araghchi expressed hope that ongoing negotiations could yield a “fair, balanced and equitable deal,” but he voiced skepticism about Washington’s intentions, citing past experiences when talks were followed by military action. “If there is a real, serious determination on their side, I believe it (agreement) is achievable,” he said.

On the nuclear issue, Araghchi reiterated Iran’s position: “We have no intention to go for nuclear weapons and no intention to go for long-range missiles.” But he also said that Tehran will not give up its right to peaceful nuclear technology. He added that Iran is willing to address any concerns through transparency and international oversight, but expects sanctions relief in return.

Omar says her guest was charged with unlawful conduct for standing up silently at SOTU

Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar said her State of the Union guest was charged with unlawful conduct for standing up silently during President Donald Trump’s speech Tuesday night.

Omar said her guest, Aliya Rahman, was arrested because she stood up in the gallery for a “short period of time, part of which other guests were also standing.”

Omar said that reports indicate that Rahman was “aggressively handled” and was taken to George Washington University Hospital for treatment, and “later booked at the United States Capitol Police headquarters.”

“The heavy-handed response to a peaceful guest sends a chilling message about the state of our democracy. I am calling for a full explanation of why this arrest occurred,” Omar said.

A statement from Capitol Police Tuesday evening said that Rahman was arrested after demonstrating during the speech.

The statement said, “All State of the Union tickets clearly explain that demonstrating is prohibited. At approximately 10:07 p.m., a person in the House Gallery started demonstrating during tonight’s State of the Union Address. The guest was told to sit down, but refused to obey our lawful orders. It is illegal to disrupt the Congress and demonstrate in the Congressional Buildings, so 43-year-old Aliya M. Rahman of Minneapolis, MN, was arrested for D.C. Code §10-503.16 - Unlawful Conduct, Disruption of Congress.”

Trump says Omar and Tlaib should be sent "back from where they came”

Rep. Ilhan Omar and Rep. Rashida Tlaib shout as President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address.

President Donald Trump lashed out at Reps. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib after they repeatedly yelled at him during his State of the Union address, saying the two Democrats “look like they should be institutionalized” and that “we should send them back from where they came.”

“When people can behave like that, and knowing that they are Crooked and Corrupt Politicians, so bad for our Country, we should send them back from where they came — as fast as possible,” Trump wrote in an insult-laden Truth Social post.

During his first term, Trump also used racist language to attack progressive Democratic congresswomen, including Tlaib and Omar, suggesting “they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.” (Tlaib is a natural-born US citizen and Omar became a citizen in 2000, according to The New York Times.)

In calling on the two Democratic lawmakers to “get on a boat,” Trump on Wednesday also veered into personal attacks against actor Robert De Niro, comparing him to Rosie O’Donnell, whose citizenship he’s previously threatened to revoke. “They should actually get on a boat with Trump Deranged Robert De Niro, another sick and demented person with, I believe, an extremely Low IQ, who has absolutely no idea what he is doing or saying.”

During Trump’s Tuesday speech, Omar and Tlaib objected to his characterization of Minnesota’s Somali community as “pirates” and accused him of enabling the deaths of US citizens through his hardline immigration crackdown in the state.

Trump administration imposes new sanctions targeting Iran ahead of high-stakes talks

The Trump administration today slapped sanctions on more than 30 targets tied to “illicit” Iranian oil sales and the country’s ballistic missile production ahead of high-stakes talks between Washington and Tehran.

The US Treasury Department said the new sanctions were part of the administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran. They come as the administration ratchets up military pressure on Tehran to accept a new nuclear deal.

Delegations are slated to sit down in Geneva tomorrow for another round of negotiations.

The latest sanctions hit vessels “operating as part of Iran’s shadow fleet,” the Treasury Department said in a press release.

They also target “multiple networks” in Iran, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates “that enable Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics (MODAFL) to secure the precursor materials and sensitive machinery required to reconstitute ballistic missile and ACW production capacity, as well as proliferate unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to third countries.” (ACW refers to advanced conventional weapons.)

The latter sanctions were imposed in support of the snap back of UN sanctions on Iran following the collapse of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, the Treasury Department said.

Meanwhile, Iran accused President Donald Trump of reiterating “big lies” about Tehran’s nuclear and ballistic missile program during yesterday’s State of the Union address. CNN’s Paula Hancocks delves deeper into Tehran’s response:

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Iran says Trump repeated 'big lies' during SOTU

After President Donald Trump's State of the Union address, Iran's foreign minister accused Trump of "big lies" and likened Washington's stance to Nazi propaganda. CNN's Paula Hancocks reports.

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Thune warns it'll be difficult to pass bill requiring proof of citizenship to vote

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he recognizes there is high interest from President Donald Trump and many congressional Republicans to move a bill that would require a person prove citizenship to vote, but warned Democrats will block it with a filibuster.

And he cautioned there is not enough support among Senate Republicans to change filibuster rules as some are advocating.

“At some point we’ll get a get it up on the floor and get it up for a vote. I just can’t guarantee an outcome or a result, which is, you know, obviously always going to be subject to where the votes are,” he told reporters.

Thune said his conference remains divided on changing filibuster rules to take up that bill, the SAVE America Act, so that is not an option right now.

“The conference is not unified on an approach on that yet,” he said about the so-called “taking filibuster,” that Sen. Mike Lee, a Republican from Utah, and others are pushing.

GOP leaders worry the complicated process of that approach could lead to potentially weeks of debate that would eat up valuable floor time.

He said they could not turn to it until the funding standoff with Democrats over the Department of Homeland Security is resolved.

Thune also said his GOP senators are “not unanimous” on some of the other issues Trump raised in his State of the Union speech, such as drug pricing changes and a ban on institutional investors buying single family homes.

Noem threatens to again suspend TSA PreCheck amid DHS shutdown

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks during a news conference at Miami International Airport in Miami, Florida, on January 31.

Hours after President Donald Trump called for Democrats to join Republicans in refunding the Department of Homeland Security during his State of the Union address, the department’s secretary Kristi Noem has said that it may again suspend TSA PreCheck by prioritizing “standard” security lanes at the airport during the partial government shutdown.

It comes after the department walked back its decision over the weekend to pause TSA PreCheck, which allow travelers to get through airport security more quickly amid the ongoing DHS shutdown. Customs and Border Protection’s Global Entry program remains paused.

“We prioritize security lanes as we can staff them. So the ones that use the most travelers, which is the standard lanes, will be prioritized because most of the traveling public goes through those lanes,” she added.

Meanwhile, Noem denied that the department reversed its decision on halting PreCheck, saying, “We never reversed the decision. We just talked about it. What priorities we’d have to make if we had the situation where call outs went high.”

TSA PreCheck and Global Entry were not paused during last year’s government shutdown, which lasted 43 days.

Only one "benefiting economically" from Trump's presidency is himself, Democratic whip says

President Donald Trump and First lady Melania Trump depart from the South Lawn of the White House to head towards the US Capitol on Tuesday.

Minority Whip Katherine Clark, who skipped last night’s State of the Union address, criticized President Donald Trump for ignoring “real issues” during his speech and speaking about a “golden age that really only applies to Donald Trump.”

The Massacusetts Democrat highlighted the negative impact of Trump’s tariff policies on small businesses, saying small business owners she has spoken to are “feeling like it is a matter of time before their doors close.”

“Donald Trump always had wide approval on his handling of the economy, and he is so under water with the American people and nothing about the vision he put out last night addresses that anxiety,” Clark said.

Rep. Ilhan Omar says her SOTU guest who was arrested is "back and safe"

Aliya Rahman is removed from the House chamber as President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address on Tuesday.

Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer and Pamela Brown that her State of the Union guest – who was arrested on Tuesday evening – is now “back and safe.”

Her guest, Aliya Rahman, was arrested by US Capitol Police during President Donald Trump’s address for allegedly disrupting the proceeding.

Omar said earlier this year that Rahman was arrested by immigration authorities and had to go to the hospital as a result of the injuries she sustained during her arrest.

The Democratic lawmaker also argued that the president is not making Americans safer at home or abroad and said his policies are failing to make people’s lives “more affordable.”

Omar went on to sharply criticize Trump, saying that while he spoke about protecting Americans in the speech, his administration was responsible for the deaths of two of her constituents, referring to Alex Pretti and Renee Good, who were both killed by federal law enforcement in Minnesota this year.

When asked about the November midterm elections, she expressed confidence in her party, stating that Democrats are united, prepared and believe voters will stand with them.

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Ilhan Omar says she has no regrets after yelling at Trump during State of the Union

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer she does not regret yelling at President Donald Trump during the State of the Union: "You have killed Americans,” after he criticized Democrats for demanding reforms before funding the Department of Homeland Security.

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Vance: Iran goals are "clear," despite Trump's lack of comprehensive case for new strikes

A sign with a depiction of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is reflected in a shop window in Tehran, Iran, on February 19.

President Donald Trump’s goals toward Iran amid a massive regional military buildup are “crystal clear,” his vice president argued Wednesday: the country must not possess a nuclear weapon.

“The president has been as crystal clear as he could be. Iran can’t have a nuclear weapon. That would be the ultimate military objective, if that’s the route that he chose,” Vice President JD Vance said in a Fox News interview, adding Trump’s “preferred route” to achieve that goal was diplomacy.

Vance suggested any confusion about Trump’s strategic objectives was misplaced, insisting the red line was “simple,” even though the president has yet to make a comprehensive public case for renewed conflict.

Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapon, and Trump has insisted Tehran’s nuclear enrichment program was “obliterated” during an American bombing run last June.

During his State of the Union address, Trump claimed Iran was again “pursuing their sinister ambitions,” and was refusing to utter “those secret words: We will never have a nuclear weapon.”

Yet if the administration only needs that vocal assurance, Iran has already complied — the country has repeatedly said it is not pursuing nuclear weapons, including as recently as Tuesday.

There are many reasons to question that claim, including Iran’s previous enrichment of uranium to near-weapons grade. But Trump’s emphasis on the country’s words alone seemed to raise more questions about what, precisely, he is looking for in a deal with the country’s leaders.

House speaker calls Gonzales allegations “detestable”

Rep. Tony Gonzales speaks during a press conference at the US Capitol, on January 29, 2024.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said he would meet with Rep. Tony Gonzales “hopefully today” but he would let the “due process here to play out as always.”

The Republican leader has resisted calls, including from within his own ranks, to pressure Gonzales to resign amid allegations he had an affair with a district staffer who later died by suicide, telling reporters he wants investigations to play out first.

Johnson had endorsed Gonzales’ bid for reelection to his San Antonio-area seat, which he is defending against Brandon Herrera – a YouTube personality who ran against him in 2024 – in a tough GOP primary fight. The primary is March 3.

SOTU showed "stark differences" between parties, GOP congressman says

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GOP lawmaker on Trump’s State of the Union showmanship
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President Donald Trump effectively used the gallery to showcase American successes and effectively contrasted his policies with those of Democrats during last night’s State of the Union address, Republican Rep. Mike Lawler said on CNN’s “Situation Room” this morning.

“I think the other thing that he did, effectively, frankly, was point out the stark differences between Republicans and Democrats,” the congressman added. “My Democratic colleagues really walked right into it when he asked every member of Congress to stand and show the American people where they stood on the issue of protecting American citizens over illegal immigrants.”

“I think that’s a moment that is going to resonate across the country for the American people,” Lawler told CNN.

Johnson spoke with Trump after SOTU

House Speaker Mike Johnson, prior to the start of President Donald Trump delivering the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress on Tuesday.

Speaker Mike Johnson said he spoke with Donald Trump last night after the State of the Union and noted to the president that his address “was the longest one of all time.”

“He said, ‘Mike, we could have gone much longer,’” Johnson said.

When asked if the president woke him up with his phone call, Johnson quipped: “Oh, no, I don’t sleep.”

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