Trump’s excess and extravagance turned the State of the Union into an action movie

Donald Trump
US President Donald Trump
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State of the Union addresses are supposed to be boring speeches.

Actually, they are not required to be speeches at all. The U.S. Constitution requires only that the president “from time to time give to the Congress information on the state of the Union and recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.”

Before Woodrow Wilson, almost every president wrote this all up and then sent the document to Congress. After Wilson decided to deliver his as a speech to Congress on Dec. 2, 1913, every subsequent president did, too.

But most of these speeches were still boring, mostly lists signaling policy priorities, often organized by what the president had done the previous year, still wanted to do, and would need from Congress in the coming year.

What President Trump did in his State of the Union address was not boring or staid. He departed from some rhetorical traditions of the presidency, as audiences have come to expect from him.

President Woodrow Wilson giving the 1913 State of the Union address to Congress.
Library of Congress, originally from Bain News Service

Looking presidential

Because presidents after Wilson addressed members of Congress in person, they tended to say they needed help from all of Congress, and thus this speech became a time when even partisan presidents would be expected to call for bipartisanship.

This way, the speech could be used as evidence that a president was trying to reach across the aisle.

Almost everybody, especially Congress, knew that the reaching across the aisle was coming, even if almost no one, especially Congress, planned to follow through. It was part of the routine. Predictable.

What has been far less predictable has been the effect of the mass media – especially television – on this particular speech.

Calvin Coolidge was the game-changer on this point. In 1923, he became the first sitting president to make a national radio address, and the speech was his state of the union that he delivered to a joint session of Congress.

Especially after the rise of television– and even more so in an era of social media’s quick takes and visual focus – the president could increasingly be expected to sound and look presidential, including by making calls for bipartisanship.

But the exciting part was to watch the live audience, which is to say, Congress. Today viewers expect a partisan Congress to engage symbolically and act for the screen: to coordinate colors of attire, to stand up, sit down and even talk back to the president, as Republican Congressman Joe Wilson did to President Obama in 2009.

Historically, then, while the speech itself can still expected to be boring and staid, the audience participation is not.

Sgt. Townsend Williams (R) waves alongside his daughter and his wife Amy (L) after returning from deployment in Afghanistan during the State of the Union.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Hyperbole rules

President Trump turned up the volume of his own rhetoric and audience engagement so much so that I would argue he symbolically stepped out from behind the podium and became part of the cheering section. He did this in two main ways.

First, he used his characteristic combination of self-references and superlatives, patterns mastered on the campaign trail. That language made the State of the Union much more excessive linguistically than this speech’s tone typically is.

Dropping in short sentences about what you have accomplished as points for partisan applause is expected. Making these claims drip so heavily with adverbs and adjectives and action verbs is not.

Rush Limbaugh gestures after being awarded the Medal of Freedom by President Donald Trump as he delivers the State of the Union address.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

“From the instant I took office, I moved rapidly to revive the U.S. economy — slashing a record number of job-killing regulations, enacting historic and record-setting tax cuts, and fighting for fair and reciprocal trade agreements,” he said shortly after the speech began.

A few minutes later, when discussing his administration’s impact on the economy, he added, “(and) very incredibly, the average unemployment rate under my administration is lower than any administration in the history of our country.”

Note that nothing here is merely an accomplishment or point of pride for Republicans to share. The tone instead is closer to an action movie, with a hero who “slashes” and “very incredibly” performs feats never before seen in the “history of our country.”

Old days: Page 85 of President Abraham Lincoln’s Second Annual Message to Congress, December 1, 1862, which was read aloud not by Lincoln, but by the Secretary of the Senate.
Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, RG 233.

This language is characteristic of Trump’s campaign rallies but not State of the Union addresses.

Extravagance is key

The second choice he made on Tuesday made clear he wanted to be in and with the crowd and its frenzy rather than behind a podium.

From a symbolic standpoint, he actually went into the crowd to give out amazing, unexpected, and big prizes: an “opportunity scholarship” for Philadelphia fourth-grader Janiyah Davis; the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Rush Limbaugh; and an Army sergeant’s emotional homecoming to his young family, the Williamses of North Carolina.

While Ronald Reagan started the tradition of telling the stories of invited guests in the gallery, Trump went further, reaching up into the gallery visually with the presentation of these surprises to make his presence – and his impact – known.

Vanessa B. Beasley, Associate Professor of Communication Studies, Vanderbilt University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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