The State of the Union Address
Most people spend their lives trying to build a reputation. Then they spend their last few minutes on their death bed trying to build their character.
I will not bash President Bush for his State of the Union address. Instead I will bash the media and those who seemed to act like Jesus Christ was arriving to address them! The whole event looking like a ceremony for a demigod. And for a president so unpopular?
Everyone wants to make the address more important than it is, especially the media, and their pundits, who need something to talk about so they can sell ads and collect revenues.
Congress members want to deify the position of President because so many of them hope to be president someday. Each congressional committee chair wants to be Speaker of the House, which has a military Boeing 757 jet for their disposal, and the Speaker of the House is number three in line to be president in case something happens to the president or vice president. This lust for power creates irrational behavior in rational people.
Thomas Jefferson did not appear before congress and make a speech because he thought it made the President seem like a monarch. Instead he sent a hand written letter to congress on the state of the Union. I agree with Thomas Jefferson.
Instead of all the fanfare, I think the State of the Union Address should simply be placed on the Internet at http://www.whitehouse.gov/index.html No more photo ops for the government elite.
The State of the Union show costs the taxpayers too much money. We should do away with the "public" State of the Union addresses to congress by the President.
Charles Tolleson
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_of_the_Union_Address George Washington gave the first State of the Union address on January 8, 1790 in New York City, then the provisional U.S. capital. In 1801, Thomas Jefferson discontinued the practice of delivering the address in person, regarding it as too monarchical (similar to the Speech from the Throne). Instead, the address was written and then sent to Congress to be read by a clerk until 1913 when Woodrow Wilson re-established the practice despite some initial controversy. However, there have been exceptions to this rule. Presidents during the latter half of the 20th century have sent written State of the Union addresses. The last President to do this was Jimmy Carter in 1980. For many years, the speech was referred to as "the President's Annual Message to Congress." The actual term "State of the Union" did not become widely used until after 1935 when Franklin D. Roosevelt began using the phrase.
Prior to 1934, the annual message was delivered at the end of the calendar year, in December. The ratification of Amendment XX on January 23, 1933 changed the opening of Congress from early March to early January, affecting the delivery of the annual message. Since 1934, the message or address has been delivered to Congress in January or February. Today, the speech is typically delivered on the last Tuesday in January, although there is no such provision written in law, and it varies from year to year, and it occurred on the last Monday of January in 2008.
The Twentieth Amendment also established January 20 as the beginning of the presidential term. In years when a new president is inaugurated, the outgoing president may deliver a final State of the Union message, but none has done so since Jimmy Carter sent a written message in 1981. In 1953 and 1961, Congress received both a written State of the Union message from the outgoing president and a separate State of the Union speech by the incoming president. Since 1989, in recognition that the responsibility of reporting the State of the Union formally belongs to the president who held office during the past year, newly inaugurated Presidents have not officially called their first speech before Congress a "State of the Union" message.
Calvin Coolidge's 1923 speech was the first to be broadcast on radio. Harry S. Truman's 1947 address was the first to be broadcast on television. Lyndon Johnson's address in 1965 was the first delivered in the evening. Bill Clinton gave his 1999 address while his impeachment trial was underway, and his 1997 address was the first broadcast available live on the World Wide Web. Ronald Reagan was the only president to have postponed his State of the Union address. On January 28, 1986, he planned to give his address, but after learning of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, he postponed it for a week and addressed the nation on the day's events.
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