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President Donald Trump delivered what is being described as the longest State of the Union address in American history – a sweeping, unapologetic vision for the country’s future. It struck a confident tone about where America stands and where it is headed.

I was reminded of the optimism that once filled the House chamber during the years of Ronald Reagan when I watched him deliver his State of the Union speeches from the House gallery. There was a similar cadence of resolve. Trump laid out what he described as a year of significant progress despite relentless opposition from major news outlets and nearly unified resistance from congressional Democrats. The theme was unmistakable: America is back and stronger than ever.

Woven neatly with recognition of real Americans to underscore accomplishments, his speech was a ledger of policy victories.

The president cited renewed tax cuts, citing that no Democrat voted for them, drawing visible applause from the Democratic side at that particular line.

He pointed to cooling inflation, stronger job growth, expanded domestic energy production, tightened border enforcement, and new trade leverage abroad.

He referenced rebuilding the military, standing with law enforcement, and accelerating American manufacturing.

He highlighted faith initiatives, parental rights in education, and policies aimed at protecting minors from medical gender transitions without parental consent.

Through much of it, Republicans and guests rose repeatedly. Democrats largely remained seated and stoic.

That contrast became the subtext of the night. Even when Trump called for unity around what he framed as basic responsibilities, such as protecting citizens and defending the nation, there was little visible bipartisan affirmation.

When he asked who believed the first duty of government (as required by the Constitution) is to protect its people, Democrats did not stand or applaud.

When he spoke of banning government-supported gender transitions for minors without parental consent, the silence across the aisle was striking. There were audible murmurs and scattered shouts of “liar.”

When the gold medal–winning American men’s hockey team was recognized, only a handful of Democrats initially rose, and more stood only after the president pointed out their sitting. Sport has long been one of the last refuges of shared pride. Even that felt strained.

The defining moment came when Trump said,

“But surely, we can all agree no state can be allowed to rip children from their parents’ arms and transition them to a new gender against the parents’ will…. We must ban it, and we must ban it immediately…. Look, nobody stands up. These people are crazy…. Democrats are destroying our country, but we’ve stopped it just in the nick of time.”

Strong words in a divided age.

Scripture reminds us of King Achish, who in 1 Samuel 21:15, said of David, “Have I need of madmen, that you have brought this fellow to play the madman in my presence?”

A nation does not need more madness in its councils. It needs wisdom, courage, and leaders who love country more than party.

Sources:

Breitbart: https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2026/02/24/sotu-livewire-president-trump-addresses-nation-at-pivotal-time-for-economy/

The White House: https://www.whitehouse.gov/articles/2026/02/democrats-showed-whose-side-theyre-on-and-its-not-the-american-people-249d/

NPR: https://www.npr.org/2026/02/25/nx-s1-5716159/trump-congress-state-union-read

 

 

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