Trump Address To Congress

President Trump's First Address To Congress
President Trump's First Address To Congress

... Messenger. Find out what's happening in the world as it unfolds. Photos: President Trump's first address to Congress. US President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress for the first time on Tuesday, February 28. Behind him, from left, are Vice President Mike Pence and House Speaker Paul Ryan. Hide Caption. Photos: President Trump's first address to Congress. Trump speaks at the beginning of his address. Hide Caption. Photos: President Trump's first address to Congress. A wide view of the House chamber. Hide Caption. 3 of 22. Photos: President Trump's first address to Congress. Supreme Court justices watch the speech. From left, in front, are John Roberts, Anthony Kennedy, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Hide Caption. 4 of 22. Photos: President Trump's first address to Congress. Maureen Scalia, the widow of late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, is applauded ...



Here's How To Watch Trump's Joint Address To Congress
Here's How To Watch Trump's Joint Address To Congress

... The Trumps arrive for the 60 th Annual Red Cross Gala at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., on on Feb. 4, 2017. Mandel Ngan, AFP/Getty Images. President Trump walks with first lady Melania Trump on the tarmac after he arrived on Air Force One at the Palm Beach International Airport for a visit to Mar-a-Lago on Feb. 3, 2017. Joe Raedle, Getty Images. Trump waves as he walks from Marine One to board Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., on Feb. 3, 2017, en route to Mar-a-Lago for the weekend. Susan Walsh, AP. Trump speaks during the beginning of a policy and strategy forum with business executives in the State Dining Room of the White House on Feb. 3, 2017. Brendan Smialowski, AFP/Getty Images. White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and Vice President Pence look on as Trump speaks briefly to reporters after greeting Harley Davidson executives on the South Lawn of the White House on Feb. 2, 2017. Drew Angerer, Getty Images. Television producer Mark Burnett, left, and Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., look on as Trump waves upon his arrival for the National Prayer Breakfast on Feb. 2, 2017, in Washington. Evan Vucci, AP. ...



Donald Trump's Address To Congress
Donald Trump's Address To Congress

... who vigorously oppose his policies and many Republicans who never expected him to be elected. Most Republican lawmakers have rallied around him since the election, hopeful that he will act on the domestic priorities they saw blocked during President Barack Obama’s eight years in office. Topping that list is undoing Obama’s signature health care law and replacing the sweeping measure. Trump offered a basic blueprint of his priorities, including ensuring that those with pre-existing conditions have access to coverage, allowing people to buy insurance across state lines and offering tax credits and expanded health savings accounts to help Americans purchase coverage. He suggested he would get rid of the current law’s requirement that all Americans carry insurance coverage, saying that “mandating every American to buy government-approved health insurance was never the right solution for America.”. Making a direct appeal for bipartisanship, Trump turned to Democrats and said, “Why not join forces to ...



Trump’s Address To Congress
Trump’s Address To Congress

... feeds. Among the organizations planning live coversage: ABC, Bloomberg, CBS, CNN, C-Span, Fox, Fox Business, Fox News, MSNBC, NBC and PBS. “We’re going to spend a lot more money on military,” Trump told “Fox & Friends” in an interview aired Tuesday, saying he could stand to see even $30 billion more than what’s being recommended. “We’re going to get involved in negotiating. We’re going to be able to get, I think, a lot more product for a buck and I’m going to be very, very serious about it,” he said. The White House said Trump has been gathering ideas for the address from the series of listening sessions he’s been holding with law enforcement officials, union representatives, coal miners and others. Aides said he was still tinkering with the speech Monday night. Republicans, impatient to begin making headway on an ambitious legislative agenda, hope Trump arrives on Capitol Hill armed with specifics on replacing the “Obamacare” health care law and overhauling the nation’s tax system, two issues he’s so far talked about in mostly general terms. More broadly, some Republicans are anxious for the president to set aside his feuds with the media, the intelligence ...



Real-time Fact-checking And Analysis Of Trump’s Address To Congress
Real-time Fact-checking And Analysis Of Trump’s Address To Congress

... Trump on Tuesday night was careful not to provide new details of his economic policy agenda. He reiterated his call for cut tax rates for businesses and individuals, and he mentioned the $1 trillion infrastructure plan that he wants Congress to authorize. Both of these will be heavy lifts for lawmakers, but Trump is making a calculated decision by keeping specific policy prescriptions out of major speeches. It gives congressional leaders more room to maneuver when they aren’t boxed in by the White House. For example, the White House has given conflicting signals on whether it supports a border-adjustment tax. This has led to confusion on Capitol Hill and threatened to bog down the entire tax reform process. Trump has promised he will provide Congress with details of his ideas to overhaul the tax code, and businesses are also clamoring for any detail of whether he will gut loopholes as a way to offset reduced rates. But for now, Trump played it safe, sticking to his longtime call for lower tax rates but avoiding other key details. The tricky negotiating, something he has long prided himself on, will have to come at a later date. Trump says Congress must ‘save Americans from ...



Fact-checking President Trump’s Address To Congress
Fact-checking President Trump’s Address To Congress

... in the homicide rate in the 30 largest cities. One outlier — Chicago — was responsible for 43.7 percent of the total increase in homicide rates in 2016. But overall, violent crime is on a decades-long decline, since the height of the crack cocaine epidemic in the early 1990 s. Crime trends can randomly fluctuate year to year. Many factors affect such rates, including the weather. This is why criminologists do not make generalizations about crime trends based on short-term comparisons of rates, such as annual or monthly changes. They consider the data over much longer periods of time — at least 10 to 15 years — to make conclusions about trends. For example, in 2006 and 2007, the national violent crime trend increased for the first time in nine years. Democrats bemoaned the return of the ...



President Trump Addresses Joint Session Of Congress
President Trump Addresses Joint Session Of Congress

... Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, telling reporters that he is going to “show great heart” to children who were brought into the United States by undocumented parents. Undocumented and legal immigrants alike will sure to be listening to what tone he takes Tuesday. Victims of anti-Semitic violence. Trump ran a campaign accused of playing to support from intolerant groups such as white nationalists and even Nazi sympathizers. He eventually condemned the support of such groups, but was criticized for his at times seeming reluctance to do so. It’s an issue that followed him into the White House. Recent anti-Semitic vandalism and bomb threats against Jewish schools and community centers have roiled communities around the United States. Asked about it during a news conference, Trump told a ...



Cnn's Reality Check Team Vets The Claims
Cnn's Reality Check Team Vets The Claims

... created - for companies that sell products and services used to build the pipeline. However, once the pipeline opens, the State Department found it would only require 35 full-time permanent jobs to run it and 15 full-time temporary jobs. Dakota Access, for its part, estimates their pipeline would add 8,000 to 12,000 construction jobs, but only about 40 permanent positions. Those are the company's internal estimates. Moreover, most of the approximately 1,200-mile pipeline has already been built. The remaining portion is a 1.5-mile stretch that would cross under Lake Oahe, north of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. Verdict: True but misleading. By some estimates, construction of the two pipelines will create just north of 10,000 construction jobs and tens of thousands of indirect jobs. However, these are primarily temporary jobs. The number of permanent jobs created directly by the pipelines would be far lower. CNN's Rene Marsh and Chris Isidore contributed to this report. Wall Street. Reality Check: Stock market's post-election rally. By Matt Egan, CNNMoney. ...



President Trump Addresses Congress
President Trump Addresses Congress

... contradicted itself. Related Stories. Caltrain acts to keep electrification plan alive. One of the most notable changes was made by the president himself, who scaled back his use of Twitter for a few days, particularly in the pre-dawn hours. One aide said the reduction in Trump's early morning tweets was a result of his ending his habit of watching "Morning Joe," the MSNBC show hosted by Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, longtime friends of the president who have been critical of some of his early moves. Brzezinski said Trump made similar claims of avoiding the TV during the campaign. "Then I would see him and Joe talking and he would say 'Joe, you know I really watch every day,'" she said. The aide who told the story about Trump and early-morning TV insisted on anonymity in order to discuss internal White House dealings. So did other advisers and associates cited in this story. By the end of last week, the White House was back ...



Presidential Trump
Presidential Trump

... time is right for an immigration bill as long as there is compromise on both sides," Trump said at the White House. But he did not provide further clarity on that position during his address. So far there is little sign that the new President's legislative agenda, which includes repealing and replacing Obamacare, a big tax overhaul, and a $1 trillion infrastructure program , is anywhere near coming to fruition. That explains why he devoted a considerable portion of the address to touting his achievements so far. He argued that his election alone had convinced big firms like Ford, Sprint, Soft Bank and Intel to invest billions of job-creating dollars in the US. He noted that stocks have put on $3 trillion in value since his election and claimed to have saved hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars, including on the new F-35 jet fighter. Trump said he also kept his word by cutting government regulations, clearing the way for the Keystone and Dakota Access pipelines and pulling out of the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal. The President also laid down clear principles for the repeal and replacement of Obamacare, a key policy goal that is threatening to become ...



Trump Addresses Congress, Taking Lighter Tone In Outlining Vision
Trump Addresses Congress, Taking Lighter Tone In Outlining Vision

... while we may be a nation divided on policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in all its very ugly forms," he said. The comment came after Trump has come under heavy criticism for not addressing such violence. He entered the House chamber to thunderous applause and spoke of the "renewal of the American spirit.". In the emotional high point of the speech, Trump turned to the first lady's box and acknowledged Carryn Owens, the widow of a US Navy Special operator, William "Ryan" Owens, who was killed in an anti-terror raid in Yemen in the first major military engagement of the new administration. "Ryan died as he lived: a warrior, and a hero - battling against terrorism and securing our nation," Trump said as the House floor erupted in a prolonged standing ovation. Owens, with tears streaming down her face, looked to the Heavens and joined in the applause. Trump still struck hardline notes. He overruled national security adviser H. R. Mc Master, according to a senior administration official, to warn of "radical ...



The Time For Trivial Fights Is Behind Us
The Time For Trivial Fights Is Behind Us

... America Great Again.". But there were other signs of Democratic dissatisfaction. Few sought to shake Trump's hand. Democratic women wore white in honor of the women's suffrage movement. Many Democrats laughed audibly when Trump said he has begun "to drain the swamp" by limiting the role of lobbyists in his administration. Former Kentucky governor Steve Beshear, delivering the Democratic response , accused Trump of picking "a Cabinet of billionaires and Wall Street insiders who want to eviscerate the protections that most Americans count on and that help level the playing field.". "That’s not being our champion," he said. "That’s being Wall Street’s champion.". Last Slide Next Slide. As with previous presidential addresses before Congress, members of both parties brought guests to help illustrate their political agendas. Trump's guest list included people who have had relatives killed by migrants who were in the country illegally. Also in the presidential box: The widow of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who died a year ago. Trump has nominated appeals court judge Neil Gorsuch to replace Scalia. Guests of Democratic lawmakers ...

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