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The View From Inside Trump’s Bubble – Michael Warren

At the beginning of most modern State of the Union addresses, presidents take a long walk into the chamber, shaking hands with members of Congress, Supreme Court justices, and military brass on their way to the rostrum as the audience claps. A few more handshakes with the vice president, the speaker, and the clerks, and the president promptly takes to the lectern, a move that usually quiets the applause, and begins his rosy assessment of the state of our union. 

The start of President Donald Trump’s address on Tuesday had a distinctly different feel. Given that around half of congressional Democrats skipped the speech, the chamber was relatively more Republican and more raucously pro-Trump than either the narrow margins in Congress or current public opinion about the president would suggest. This felt less like an address to the legislative branch and more like one of the president’s legendary political rallies.

After the customary extended walk into the chamber, Trump stepped onto the speaker’s rostrum. Then he stopped, paused, and looked outward at the applauding audience in the House of Representatives chamber. He seemed to be soaking in the adulation as he would at a rally, where the PA system is usually playing a syrupy patriotic tune like Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” as Trump superfans cheer and holler.

There was no such soundtrack in the U.S. Capitol, but Trump went through all the familiar rally motions. He nodded, waved, pointed, and gave the occasional thumbs-up sign. His head turned this way and that—-though less to the left side of the chamber, where the Democrats sat stonefaced and only a handful kept the applause going. The break went on for nearly two more minutes before Speaker Mike Johnson broke in to introduce the president, who then enjoyed another extended applause break (along with shouts of “USA!”) before finally stepping up to the microphone for his speech.

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