Donald Trump delivered the longest State of the Union address in American history Tuesday night — one hour and 48 minutes of victory laps, policy promises, and pointed jabs at the Democrats who sat stone-faced before him.
The speech came at a pivotal moment. Tensions with Iran are flaring. His global tariffs were just struck down by the Supreme Court. And midterm elections loom in November, threatening Republican control of Congress.
Here are the key moments from a night that was anything but routine.

1. The Half-Empty Bench
It was the first time Trump faced the Supreme Court justices since he called them “fools and lap dogs” for striking down his tariffs.
Typically, all nine justices attend the State of the Union. On Tuesday, only four were present: Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Elena Kagan, and Brett Kavanaugh.
When Trump entered, he shook Roberts’s hand with a stoic look that spoke volumes. Later, when he addressed the tariffs ruling directly, he softened his language but not his message — calling the decision “disappointing” and “unfortunate.”
The camera cut to Barrett, his own appointee, who ruled against him. She sat motionless, staring ahead as Trump spoke just feet away.
Trump announced he would replace the struck-down tariffs with new 15% duties under a never-used law called Section 122 — and then added something that raised eyebrows across the chamber: “Congressional action will not be necessary.”
The line signaled what critics have feared: Trump may not intend to follow the 150-day limit the law imposes.
2. Ejected — Again
Dozens of Democrats skipped the speech entirely, choosing instead to attend “People’s State of the Union” rallies across Washington. Their empty seats were visible in every wide shot of the chamber.
Those who stayed made their presence known.
Representative Al Green of Texas was escorted out for the second year in a row. As Trump entered, Green held up a sign reading: “Black people aren’t apes!” — a reference to a racist video Trump posted and later deleted showing Barack and Michelle Obama as primates.
Security officers removed him as he shouted.
Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota repeatedly interrupted Trump when he discussed immigration and alleged fraud in Somali-American communities.
“That’s a lie, you’re a liar,” Omar shouted from her seat next to Representative Rashida Tlaib. Both women yelled throughout the president’s remarks, their voices occasionally audible on the broadcast.
Trump noted the silent protests with visible satisfaction.
“These people are crazy. I’m telling you. They’re crazy,” he said at one point.
3. ‘U-S-A! U-S-A!’
The most bipartisan moment of the night arrived not with policy but with patriotism.
The U.S. men’s hockey team descended from the press gallery into the chamber, gold medals gleaming after their overtime victory against Canada at the Winter Olympics.
The room erupted in chants of “U-S-A!” — Democrats and Republicans on their feet together.
Trump announced that goalie Connor Hellebuyck would receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. He then added a line that quickly went viral:
“I must tell you, we’re going to have to bring the women’s team, you do know that. If I did not also invite the women’s team, I do believe I probably would be impeached.”
The joke landed awkwardly in a room where many had just watched a colleague removed for protesting. But later, Trump announced the women’s team would also visit the White House.
Patriotism ran throughout the speech — from the 250th anniversary celebrations planned for summer to repeated invocations of American greatness. But Trump also used the theme to highlight division.
At one point, he asked the chamber to stand if they agreed: “The first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.”
Republicans rose, cheering. Democrats stayed seated, motionless. The camera held the image for an uncomfortable beat — a perfect snapshot of the country Trump governs and the divide he embodies.
The Highlights To Remember
· 108 minutes: Longest State of the Union in history
· 4 of 9 justices: Attended, the lowest number in recent memory
· 2 lawmakers ejected: Al Green (escorted out) and multiple Democrats who shouted through the speech
· 2 hockey teams honored: Men’s and women’s gold medalists
· 1 new tariff regime: 15% global duties under Section 122
· 9 months until midterms: When voters will decide whether Trump keeps Congress
Trump left the chamber after nearly two hours, having delivered what his base will call strength and his opponents will call spectacle.
For the justices who ruled against him, the Democrats who shouted over him, and the millions watching at home, one thing was clear: the State of the Union may be a constitutional requirement, but under Trump, it’s also a battleground.
















