Here’s
How to Watch Trump’s Address to Congress
At 9 p.m.
Eastern, President Trump will speak to a joint session of Congress for the
first time in his second term. The New York Times will carry the address live.
Minho Kim
By Minho Kim
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/04/us/politics/trump-speech-congress-when-time-watch.html
March 4,
2025
Updated 4:04
p.m. ET
President
Trump will address the joint session of Congress on Tuesday night at 9 p.m.,
expected to lay out his aggressive agenda for remaking the federal government
and shifting U.S. foreign policy during his first televised prime-time speech
of his second term.
Mr. Trump is
expected to speak about the sweeping staff firings affecting nearly every
corner of the federal government. He is also likely to address the strained
relationship with Ukraine after the Oval Office blowup with the country’s
leader last week, as he has sought to improve ties with Russia while pushing
through a critical minerals deal with Ukraine.
The
president may mention his administration’s crackdown on illegal border
crossings that coincided with a drop in the number of migrants across the
Southern border, as well as his legislative push for tax and spending cuts that
together could increase the federal deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars.
Here’s what
you need to know.
Where can I
watch?
The New York
Times will stream the address at nytimes.com with live analysis from reporters.
The speech will also be carried by major television networks and on cable.
Who will
deliver responses?
Democrats
have chosen Senator Elissa Slotkin, a first-term Democrat from Michigan, to
deliver their response to Mr. Trump’s address. Ms. Slotkin, 48, narrowly won
her Senate seat in November in the swing state that Mr. Trump carried. She was
first elected to the House in 2018 with other centrist Democratic women who had
backgrounds in the military or intelligence and who were recruited as a
counterweight to Mr. Trump. Ms. Slotkin worked as a C.I.A. analyst and in
national security posts for both President George W. Bush and President Barack
Obama.
Representative
Adriano Espaillat, Democrat of New York, whose Hispanic-majority district
includes Upper Manhattan and parts of the Bronx, will deliver a
Spanish-language response to Mr. Trump’s speech. He is the first Dominican
American and the first immigrant who was previously undocumented to serve in
Congress. As a state lawmaker, Mr. Espaillat strongly supported the New York
policy that allows undocumented immigrants to obtain driver's licenses. The
Trump administration has sued the state over the state policy.
Progressive
Democrats have picked Representative Lateefah Simon of California, who was
elected to an open seat in the East Bay area in November, to deliver their
response. Ms. Simon, the first member of Congress to have been born blind, will
give the response from the Working Families Party.
Who will
attend?
The
president and first lady typically invite guests to sit in the first lady’s box
during the speech.
Melania
Trump, the first lady, has invited Elliston Berry, a teenage victim of
A.I.-generated pornography, along with Ms. Berry’s mother and stepfather.
Lawmakers from both parties have been pushing for a bill that would criminalize
the act of publishing explicitly sexual images without consent and require
social media platforms to remove those images.
Speaker Mike
Johnson has invited Tom Homan, Mr. Trump’s “border czar” at the White House,
and Olivia Hayes, whose husband, Wesley Hayes, was killed in a car crash that
involved an undocumented immigrant who drove under the influence of alcohol,
according to the speaker’s office. Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, said
she planned to invite Scott Root, the father of Sarah Root, who was killed in
2016 by a drunken driver who was in the country illegally.
At President
Joseph R. Biden’s State of the Union address last year, Republicans wore pins
and T-shirts depicting Laken Riley, the nursing student killed by an
undocumented Venezuelan migrant, in support of Mr. Trump’s immigration agenda.
Democratic
lawmakers have invited those affected by the Trump administration’s rapid and
indiscriminate firings of federal employees. Senator Tina Smith, Democrat of
Minnesota, will welcome Kate Severson, one of around 1,000 National Park
Service employees who were abruptly dismissed on Feb. 14. Representative Brad
Schneider of Illinois will bring Adam Mulvey, an Army veteran of 20 years who
was fired from a health care facility for military veterans last month.
Minho Kim
covers breaking news and climate change. He is based in Washington. More about
Minho Kim


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