Pelosi To Trump: House Won’t Host State Of The Union Until Shutdown Ends
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BY SCOTT HORSLEY
President Trump promised to find an alternative setting for his State of the Union address, after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., insisted he could not speak on the House floor until a partial government shutdown is over.
The president and the speaker traded barbed letters Wednesday, with Trump initially saying he wanted to deliver the speech next Tuesday in the House chamber — the traditional location.
“It would be so very sad for our Country if the State of the Union were not delivered on time, on schedule, and very importantly, on location!” Trump wrote, formally accepting an invitation that Pelosi had originally extended on Jan. 3.
But Pelosi had rescinded that invitation a week earlier, citing security concerns. She noted that both the Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security are unfunded as a result of the ongoing budget standoff.
Pelosi suggested Trump postpone the speech until the partial shutdown is over. She also gave the president the option of delivering his message to Congress in writing — a common practice in the 19th century but one that would have denied Trump a major platform on prime-time television.
READ TRUMP’S LETTER TO PELOSI HERE
When Trump brushed aside those concerns, Pelosi adopted stronger language.
“I am writing to inform you that the House of Representatives will not consider a concurrent resolution authorizing the President’s State of the Union address in the House Chamber until government has opened,” Pelosi wrote in her own letter on Wednesday.
The battle of wills over the speech is a microcosm of the larger showdown over Trump’s demand for a $5.7 billion border wall, which has shuttered parts of the government for more than a month.
Pelosi’s stiff-arm left the president looking for an alternate setting from which to address the nation.
“The State of the Union has been canceled by Nancy Pelosi because she doesn’t want to hear the truth,” Trump also told reporters Wednesday.
He could deliver the speech from the White House or from one of the several state capitols where he’s been invited.
“The American people want to hear the truth,” Trump said. “They have to hear the truth.”
NPR congressional correspondent Susan Davis contributed to this report.
Copyright 2019 National Public Radio
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