‘America Is Respected Again Like Never Before’: Donald Trump Addresses Congress in State of the Union
US President Donald Trump addressed a joint session of Congress in his annual State of the Union speech, marking his first major address since returning to office for a second term. The president used the platform to project confidence in his leadership and frame his administration's first year as a decisive break from what he described as national decline.
The speech unfolded amid turbulence on both economic and geopolitical fronts. Trump's tariff strategy has faced judicial pushback, with earlier trade levies struck down by the Supreme Court of the United States, prompting the administration to roll out a new 15 per cent tariff regime across global imports. At the same time, escalating friction between Washington and Iran has heightened fears of a potential military confrontation.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

Economy, borders and power projection
Striking a combative tone, Trump told lawmakers that the US economy was performing at historic levels. His remarks were met with loud chants of "USA" inside the chamber, as supporters appeared to counter visible protests during the address.
The president claimed that border enforcement had been restored, argued that hostile foreign actors were now deterred, and said American law enforcement and armed forces were operating from a position of renewed strength. According to Trump, US standing on the world stage had been rebuilt after years of erosion.
Claiming rapid change
Trump portrayed his return to the Oval Office as a moment of national reckoning, arguing that his administration had inherited deep-rooted problems but delivered swift results.
"In just one year, we've rewritten the trajectory of this country," he said, describing his second term as a period of historic correction rather than incremental change.
Despite the confident messaging, recent surveys suggest public support for the president has softened, with concerns persisting over rising living costs, immigration challenges and the direction of US foreign policy.
'The trajectory is upward'
Returning repeatedly to the theme of momentum, Trump insisted that the country's progress was accelerating.
A year ago, he said, the US was grappling with inflation, unchecked migration, weakening institutions and global instability. Now, he argued, those trends had been reversed, and the nation had entered what he characterised as a new era of growth and control.
"We are not standing still," Trump said. "This is just the beginning."
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