Published on http://hnn.us/article/154543
It is time to rethink the State of the Union Address.
On January 28, Americans will once again endure the
pointless spectacle of yet another State of the Union Address. The President will enter the chamber like a
reigning monarch with all branches of government in polite attendance. Many promises will be made, of which few will
be kept. Many cheap applause lines will
be given so that everyone in the Chamber, except the Supreme Court Justices,
will rise in ovation. An array of
symbolic guests will be seated next to the First Lady and be used as props at
key junctures in the speech.
Whether Republican or Democrat, Presidents use the State of
the Union address to annually reboot their agenda. It is a huge waste of time for everyone
involved. It creates the visage of an
imperial President holding the co-equal branches of government hostage to the
vanity of one person. The only people
longing for this annual rite are the pundits who get to spend a week speculating
on the speech and another week analyzing it.
It is the Super Bowl for politicians.
The only difference is the cheerleading occurs afterward in Statuary
Hall and the pre-game tailgate parties are held at expensive clubs and
restaurants.
Why is there a State of the Union speech?
There is no official reason for the speech. There is not
even a requirement for it to be annual. Article
II, Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution only requires the
President to make a report:
He shall from time to
time give to the Congress information of the State of the Union ,
and recommend to their Consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary
and expedient.
It is also not required that Congress grant the President
the use of their Chamber for a ritualized infomercial. Both the Senate and the
House of Representatives must formally vote on a Joint Resolution to convene a
Joint Session of Congress. At any time, one or both Chambers could bring an end
to this tedium by simply refusing to approve the resolution.
President George Washington delivered the first State of the
Union speech in person before a Joint Session of Congress on January 8,
1790. Since then, there have been 223
opportunities for Presidents to deliver their report. Presidents have delivered their report as a
speech before a Joint Session of Congress only 98 times. The other 125 times were through written
communication.
George Washington and John Adams delivered their State of
the Union reports as speeches, but Thomas Jefferson let his written word
suffice. For 113 years, no other
President delivered a State of the Union speech until Woodrow Wilson on
December 2, 1913. President Warren
Harding continued this new practice as did Calvin Coolidge, once.
For ten years, Congress did not have to arrange a Joint
Session for the State of the Union Address.
Then Franklin Roosevelt asked for the forum in 1934. In 1946, President
Harry Truman opted out of a formal speech because, during the previous nine
months, there had been five Joint Sessions of Congress relating to the end of
World War II. In 1956, President
Eisenhower opted out of a speech because he was still recovering from his
September 24, 1955 heart attack.
Since Bush’s 2002 flourish viewership of State of the Union
Addresses has plummeted. In 2003, 62
million watched. By 2013, only 33.4
million viewed the festivities. Even if
you factor in alternative viewing modes offered by digital media, the audience
has substantially declined. It seems
that most Americans, unlike politicians and pundits, are tuning out this
outdated and superficial display of Washington
excess. Imagine any State of the Union address without the pomp and pageantry
and without countless interruptions for orchestrated applause. The words would be even more empty and
meaningless than they are already.
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