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With the midterms approaching and polls showing unease about the economy, some of President Trump's arguments about its strength sounded eerily like those of his predecessor.
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President Trump turned his State of the Union address into full-blown political theater, handing out medals to war veterans and tossing the spotlight to ice hockey players.
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"We all know the answer is no," the Virginia governor argued in her rebuttal to President Trump's State of the Union address.
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President Trump spoke for nearly two hours to a joint session of Congress.
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Even as the president considers an attack, his State of the Union address offered little more than a brief repetition of vague talking points from recent days.
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The president announced medals for the U.S. men's hockey team's star goalie as well as several military veterans.
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President Donald Trump delivered the State of the Union address tonight — his first since returning to office for a second term.
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Democrats refused to allow a bill to reopen the Department of Homeland Security to move ahead without new restrictions on federal agents carrying out President Trump's immigration enforcement drive.
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The State of the Union gives the president a high-profile chance to issue a call to action on election security legislation he has pressured Republicans to ram through over Democratic opposition.
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War crimes prosecutor Reed Brody joins Democracy Now! to discuss a number of ongoing human rights issues, including the international fallout of the so-called "Epstein files," the International Criminal Court case against former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, the Russian invasion of Ukraine — now marking its fourth anniversary — and more.
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The editor who oversees White House coverage for The Times talks about the challenges of tracking a major speech by a president who regularly goes off script.
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President Trump will speak to a legislative body that has ceded much of its power to him but has recently pushed back gently, and where partisan divides are deeper than ever ahead of the midterm elections.
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The remarks differ from what Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is said to have told the president in high-level White House meetings.
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