Live updates: State of the Union 2019 | CNN Politics

Trump’s State of the Union address

WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 05:  Female lawmakers cheer during President Donald Trump's State of the Union address in the chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol Building on February 5, 2019 in Washington, DC. A group of female Democratic lawmakers chose to wear white to the speech in solidarity with women and a nod to the suffragette movement.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Female lawmakers cheer Trump at State of the Union
02:46 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • What was in the speech: The President gave an 82-minute State of the Union address. He called for a rejection of “politics of revenge” and jabbed Democrats, despite the speech’s bipartisan opening appeals.
  • Fact check: What did he get wrong? What was on point? Read on for our fact checking of Trump’s speech.
  • The Democratic response: Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams slammed the Trump administration and called the government shutdown a “stunt engineered” by the President. Read it.
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Our live coverage of President Trump’s State of the Union has ended, but if you want to read and see how the night unfolded, you can…

  • Read our fact check of the speech.
  • Watch the moment Trump gave the women of Congress a shout out.
  • Go through Trump’s full speech transcript.
  • See the State of the Union in pictures.
  • Read about the Democratic response from Stacey Abrams.

Pelosi: "It will take days to fact-check all the misrepresentations that the President made tonight"

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi responded to Trump’s Tuesday night address in a statement, criticizing the President for threatening “the United States Congress not to exercise its constitutional responsibility of oversight.”

the statement continued: “President Trump must now take concrete steps to work with Democrats to strengthen the health and economic security of families across America. After two years of the President’s empty words, the American people deserve real results.”

Fact check: Trump claimed ISIS controlled "more than 20,000 square miles in Iraq and Syria." He's right.

President Trump claimed tonight in his speech that ISIS controlled “more than 20,000 square miles in Iraq and Syria.”

“When I took office, ISIS controlled more than 20,000 square miles in Iraq and Syria. Just two years ago. Today, we have liberated virtually all of the territory from the grip of these bloodthirsty monsters.” 

Fact check: Trump is right about the amount of territory re-captured from ISIS during his time office.

At the end of 2016, ISIS controlled territory in Syria and Iraq was about 23,320 square miles, according to IHS Jane’s. On Tuesday, Gen. Joseph Votel, the commander of US Central Command, said the group is “down to about 20 square miles that they still control.”

Tonight, Trump pointedly chose not to repeat his false statement that ISIS has been defeated, a claim his own generals have contradicted. On Tuesday, Votel said the fight against the terror group is “not over.”

Fact check: Trump said the US would be at war with North Korea without him. That's questionable.

In his State of the Union Speech, President Trump claimed that had he “not been elected President of the United States, we would right now … be in a major war with North Korea.”

This is questionable.

Remember: The diplomatic thaw did not begin with Trump. It began in early 2018 when South Korean President Moon Jae-in welcomed North Korean athletes to the winter Olympics in PyeongChang in February. In April, Moon and Kim Jong Un held the first inter-Korean summit in more than a decade at the Korean demilitarized zone. 

Before that, Trump’s rhetoric had arguably raised tensions. His August 2017 threat to meet North Korea “with fire, fury and, frankly, power the likes of which the world has never seen before,” prompted Pyongyang, the next day, to threaten to strike the US territory of Guam with an “enveloping fire.”

Trump did break precedent by hastily agreeing to an historic summit in Singapore with Kim. The June 2018 talks led to a vaguely worded commitment to “complete denuclearization.” Talks between the US and North Korea have faltered due to both sides’ drastically different definitions of denuclearization, but Trump announced during the speech that he would meet for a second summit with Kim on February 27-28 in Vietnam.

Bernie Sanders slams Trump in post-Democratic rebuttal

Sen. Bernie Sanders disputed President Trump’s touting of economic boom times in America during his own live-streamed response to the State of the Union speech.

He also spelled out the costs of the government shutdown and placed the blame squarely on Trump’s insistence on funding for a border wall.

“No, President Trump, building a wall is not an emergency,” Sanders said. “What we need to do is not waste billions of dollars on a wall, but to finally address the need for comprehensive immigration reform, including a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented people.”

Sanders, who is expected to enter the Democratic presidential primary soon, had come under criticism of his own from some in the party who felt his decision to give the remarks, though he has done the same in past years, risked casting a shadow over Stacey Abrams’ speech. (Abrams delivered the Democratic response following Trump’s address.)

Earlier in the day, Symone Sanders, a national press secretary for the Vermont senator during his 2016 presidential campaign and now a CNN contributor, said she would have advised him not to give the talk.

“If Sen. Sanders is somebody that’s thinking about throwing his name in the ring for president, and he knows he has an issue with people saying that they don’t think he supports and uplifts the voices of black women, of people of color, do not step on Stacey Abrams,” she said. “Do not give more fodder to the people that are already going to be critical of you in the first place.

Fact check: Trump claimed the southern border is "lawless." Here's what we know about crime there.

In his State of the Union speech, President Trump said the southern border is “lawless,” while making the case for sending an additional 3,750 troops to the border.

“The lawless state of our southern border is a threat to the safety, security and financial well-being of all Americans,” Trump said.

Here’s what we know about the nature of crime around the border region as well as security there:

  • There were 19,555 Border Patrol agents assigned to patrol the nation’s borders in fiscal year 2018. It was the first year that had a net staffing gain in five years.
  • The majority of Border Patrol agents are assigned to the southern border. 
  • Those Border Patrol agents apprehended 396,579 immigrants crossing the border illegally in 2018, which was down from a peak of 1,643,679 arrests nineteen years ago. Meanwhile, Border Patrol agents seized tens of thousands of pounds of illegal drugs at the border in past years.

One thing to note: Studies and officials have also found that the US side of the border is relatively safe compared to other US cities.

“Violent crime rates have remained the same or dropped in many border cities” in the last five years prior to 2016, for which data is available, found an analysis by the Texas Tribune.

For example, “border communities like Laredo, El Paso, Edinburg and Brownsville all saw fewer than 400 crimes for every 100,000 residents, according to the 2016 report.

“You’ve got to understand, we’re a border city so we have a lot of local law enforcement,” said Ponce Treviño, Webb County Jail commander, told the Tribune.

Former Customs and Border Patrol Commissioner David Aguilar said in 2015 that “border communities are safer than the interior locations of each of the border states. Violent crime is lesser along the border than it is in the interior,” reported the Huffington Post.

Abrams: "I am very disappointed by the President ... I still don’t want him to fail"

Stacey Abrams, a rising star in the Democratic Party, delivered its response to the State of the Union from southwest Atlanta.

The former Democratic gubernatorial candidate, who donned a white brooch as a hat tip to the suffragettes, set a personal tone, starting off what might be considered her biggest spotlight moment to date, talking about her childhood, saying that her family “went back and forth between lower middle class and working poor.

Yet, even when they came home weary and bone-tired, my parents found a way to show us all who we could be.” She added that “faith, service, education and responsibility” were their family values.

Recalling distributing meals to furloughed federal workers during the recent shutdown, Abrams said that making Federal Workers’ “livelihoods a pawn for political games is a disgrace. The shutdown was a stunt engineered by the President of the United States, one that defied every tenet of fairness and abandoned not just our people - but our values.”

Regarding the immigration debate, Abrams said “we know bipartisanship could craft a 21st century immigration plan, but this administration chooses to cage children and tear families apart. Compassionate treatment at the border is not the same as open borders.” Adding “America is made stronger by the presence of immigrants – not walls.”

Abrams, who’s own race was mired in controversy over voter irregularities, said there is much this country can do, “But none of these ambitions are possible without the bedrock guarantee of our right to vote.”

Abrams continued, “in this time of division and crisis, we must come together and stand for, and with, one another. America has stumbled time and again on its quest towards justice and equality; but with each generation, we have revisited our fundamental truths, and where we falter, we make amends.”  

As she wrapped up her remarks, Abrams said “even as I am very disappointed by the president’s approach to our problems – I still don’t want him to fail. But we need him to tell the truth, and to respect his duties and the extraordinary diversity that defines America.”

Watch:

Fact check: Trump's claim that the Senate has failed to act on confirmations is misleading

President Trump blasted the Senate for failing to confirm more than 300 nominees to executive branch positions.

Fact check: This is misleading. While it is true that confirmations for the Trump administration’s nominations lag behind the rate of confirmation for other American presidents, it is inaccurate to suggest that it is entirely the Republican controlled-Senate’s fault.

The Senate has not confirmed 274 of the 705 key executive branch positions tracked by the Washington Post and the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service. While Trump and Senate Republicans sharply criticize Democrats for slowing down the confirmation process, more than half of those positions — 144 to be exact — are open because the Trump administration has not yet nominated a candidate, according to their study. The jobs range from ambassadorships to important undersecretary roles to governorships at the Federal Reserve board.

Overall, Partnership’s analysis shows that 54% of Trump civilian executive branch nominations have been confirmed, much lower than the 77% of Obama nominees confirmed at the same point in his presidency.

How New York's governor responded to Trump's remarks on the state's Reproductive Health Act

Earlier tonight, President Trump referenced a newly passed law in New York that allows abortions after 24 weeks if the fetus is not viable or when necessary to protect the life of the mother.

The Reproductive Health Act also preserves access to abortions and removes abortion from the state’s criminal code, among other protections.

What Trump said:

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo responded with this:

These Democrats wore pins for a Guatemalan girl who died in border protection custody

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York retweeted a post saying the congresswoman was wearing a pin for 7-year-old Jakelin Caal, the child from Guatemala who died in the custody of US Customs and Border Protection last year.

Here’s the message Ocasio-Cortez retweeted:

Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Michigan, also posted on Instagram an image of the pin, with the caption “We are bringing Jakelin Caal into the room with us during the #SOTU.”

Fact check: Trump makes inaccurate connection between El Paso's crime rate and the wall

President Trump made an inaccurate connection between El Paso’s previously high crime rates and the construction of a border wall during his speech tonight.

What he said:

What we know: The President’s statement, which has been repeated by public officials and the White House over the course of the last year, makes an inaccurate connection. 

According to an analysis of FBI crimes data and city law enforcement data analyzed by the El Paso Times, violent crime in El Paso peaked in 1993. Border fence construction didn’t begin until 2008, and was completed in 2009.

But violent crime fell long before the wall was built in El Paso, with violent crime falling 34% between 1993 and 2006 in the city. And according to the El Paso Times, from 2006 to 2011, violent crime in El Paso actually increased by 17 percent.

Fact check: Trump falsely claims that the US spent more than $7 trillion in the Middle East

President Trump brought up US expenditures for conflicts “in Afghanistan and Iraq,” and claimed, “We have spent more than $7 trillion dollars in the Middle East.”

Fact check: This is false – never mind that Afghanistan isn’t in the Middle East.

And it’s not the first time Trump has floated this claim about spending on wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The non-partisan Congressional Research Service said that between 2001 and 2014, the operational costs for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were $1.6 trillion.

A CNN analysis found that in order to get to $7 trillion, you have to add future spending, most of which is for veterans over the next 35 years.

How Trump's Cabinet is responding to his address

Member's of Trump's Cabinet

Following Trump’s State of the Union address, members of his administration were quick to applaud the President for his remarks through statements.

Here’s a look at how some of his Cabinet responded:

  • Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin: “President Trump’s pro-growth, pro-worker policies are delivering rising wages and historically low unemployment for the benefit of all Americans.”
  • Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen: “DHS frontline personnel have made it clear what they need from Congress to end the crisis and fully secure the border. It is time Congress recognizes the facts on the ground and takes this problem seriously.”
  • Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker: “President Trump’s speech presented a hopeful, optimistic vision for this country. An America with a secure southern border would be an America with less crime, less addiction, and better wages for working families.”
  • Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao: “Tonight the President issued a bipartisan call to repair and restore America’s aging infrastructure. Over the last two years, due to the President’s policies, our economy has generated historic levels of economic and job growth for Americans and widespread private sector investment.”
  • Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross: “Under President Trump’s leadership, common-sense policies have brought hope to the forgotten American worker. The President’s strong defense and foreign policy initiatives have restored American leadership on the international stage.”
  • Secretary of State Mike Pompeo: “In his first two years, President Trump has strengthened America at home and abroad by putting the interests of the American people first and reasserting American leadership around the world.”

Fact check: Trump's claim that he would support legal immigration is at odds with his administration's stance

In his address tonight, President Trump claimed he would support the “largest numbers ever” of immigrants — but only if they came here legally.

Fact check: This is at odds with what’s been the administration’s stance on legal immigration. Trump has both sought to cut legal immigration and has made it more difficult for asylum seekers. 

Administration officials have signaled a desire to curtail a number of aspects of the legal immigration system, from family-based immigration to the diversity visa lottery.

While major overhauls of legal immigration policies would require Congress to pass legislation, immigrant rights advocates say there are signs the Trump administration is already reshaping the system in more subtle ways, making it more difficult to obtain certain visas. The Trump administration has also slashed the number of refugees the US has taken in. 

Last week, the administration also began implementing the so-called Migrant Protection Protocols, which allows for the administration to return some migrants seeking asylum in the United States to Mexico to await their immigration court hearing.

As of last week, more than a dozen migrants had been returned to Mexico under the Trump administration’s new asylum policy since execution of the program began, according to senior DHS officials.

Van Jones calls Trump’s address "psychotically incoherent"

CNN’s Van Jones fired back at fellow contributor Rick Santorum’s analysis of President Trump’s second State of the Union address Tuesday night, saying the speech was a mix of “cookies and dog poop.”

“I saw this as a psychotically incoherent speech with cookies and dog poop,” said Jones, moments after the speech had concluded.

Jones made his point in response to Santorum’s argument that Trump had put forth concrete proposals that represented outreach to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Democrats, and that it lacked red meat for his conservative base.

Trump offered “a couple [of proposals] for the base, a couple for the other side and ‘this is what I want to do,’” said the former Republican senator.

Watch:

This Missouri Republican shouted, "Yes!" when Trump brought up paid family leave

Rep. Ann Wagner (R-MO)

Rep. Ann Wagner confirmed to CNN after the State of the Union that she was the member to shout in approval when Trump discussed paid family leave.

“That was me!” the Missouri Republican said.

What happened: After President Trump mentioned his administration’s work on a nationwide family leave plan, someone in the audience shouted, “Yes!”

“I am also proud to be the first president to include in my budget a plan for nationwide paid family leave so that every new parent has the chance to bond with their newborn child,” Trump said.

Watch:

Fact check: Trump can take credit for some of the "economic boom," but not all of it

President Trump, speaking to the full chamber, touted his administration’s economic gains since he took office.

“In just over two years since the election, we have launched an unprecedented economic boom – a boom that has rarely been seen before,” he said.

Fact check: Trump can claim some credit for the acceleration of the economy on his watch, but not most of it.

He inherited a labor market in the later stages of a long recovery from the Great Recession, with fairly consistent job creation. Growth in monthly payrolls reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics averaged 217,000 jobs under President Obama’s second term, and under Trump it has averaged 203,000, pushing the overall unemployment rate to the lowest level since 1969 and unprecedented levels for people of color.

The economy has added 4.87 million jobs since Trump took office, not 5.3 million, the number he cited. 

Wage growth has picked up since late 2017 especially for rank and file workers, but not to the above 3.5% rates seen in the late 1990s and mid-2000s. Some of the pace of the increase had to do with states and cities raising their minimum wages, which the President had no hand in.

Indeed, the economy grew at a rate of 4.2% in the second quarter of 2018, fueled in part by the surge in government defense spending, as well as a large corporate tax cut that temporarily goosed business investment. By the third quarter of 2018, growth slowed to a rate of 3.4%.

A key point to remember: Economists forecast a further deceleration through 2019, as the effects of the fiscal stimulus wear off and as businesses and consumers confront higher interest rates.

Abrams: "We are coming for America, for a better America"

Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams is giving the Democratic rebuttal to Trump’s State of the Union.

“Tonight, we are coming for America, for a better America,” she said.

She recounted a story from her childhood, echoing that language.

About the venue: Abrams is delivering her remarks from the IBEW Local 613 union hall in southwest Atlanta. This was the first local endorser of her 2018 campaign for Governor of Georgia. She has always had strong ties with labor. 

Several members of IBEW Local 613 were in the audience.

Watch:

Stacey Abrams gives the Democratic response

Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams is now giving the Democratic response to President Trump’s State of the Union address.

Abrams, who is seen as a rising star in the Democratic party, has already released excerpts of her speech.

In her speech, she blasts Trump for the shutdown, saying it was “engineered by the President of the United States, one that defied every tenet of fairness and abandoned not just our people — but our values.”

We’ll bring you highlights from her speech momentarily.

President Trump's speech clocks in at 82 minutes

President Trump just wrapped up his State of the Union speech.

Trump spoke for 82 minutes in the House chambers in front of Democratic and Republican lawmakers and their guests.

Trump made some major announcements, including a second summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, during his speech. He also called for bipartisanship and unity.

Read Trump’s entire speech here.

GO DEEPER

Readers’ guide to the State of the Union
Harry Truman delivered the first ever State of the Union. (Really.)
Dissecting Donald Trump’s ‘oddly adolescent’ speaking style
Women invited to wear white to Trump’s State of the Union address
Stacey Abrams to give Democratic response of the State of the Union

GO DEEPER

Readers’ guide to the State of the Union
Harry Truman delivered the first ever State of the Union. (Really.)
Dissecting Donald Trump’s ‘oddly adolescent’ speaking style
Women invited to wear white to Trump’s State of the Union address
Stacey Abrams to give Democratic response of the State of the Union