| President Trump's State of the Union address last night. Photo: Kenny Holston/The New York Times President Trump used last night's State of the Union address to portray himself as America's savior and protector, as the country marks its 250th birthday, Axios CEO Jim VandeHei says in a "Behind the Curtain" video. 🇺🇸 VandeHei says Trump "wanted to prove that he is the strong and patriotic one, and that Democrats, by contrast, are weak and weird. You saw this in the choreography from the moment he walked onto the stage until he left." - The president "knows that while he's unpopular, Democrats are equally unpopular. Democrats haven't done a good job of proving themselves to be an acceptable alternative to Trump."
"The most poignant moment was where he isolated on this idea of: Will you stand for U.S. citizens, or will you stand for illegal immigrants?" VandeHei added. - ⏱️ "He just taunted and taunted the Democrats. He let it hang in the air for what felt like minutes — because he understood that the imagery of Democrats sitting down when he's saying 'stand up if you stand for U.S. citizens' is brilliant politics."
Cover: New York Post 🇮🇷 Another moment to tuck away and think about, VandeHei says: Trump started to lay the predicate for war with Iran. - Trump said last night: "One thing is certain: I will never allow the world's No. 1 sponsor of terror — which they are by far — to have a nuclear weapon. Can't let that happen."
💸 Trump mostly dismissed Americans' affordability concerns, Axios' Neil Irwin and Courtenay Brown report. - Rather than present an I-feel-your-pain message paired with a litany of policy proposals, he argued that things are looking great.
Watch the video ... Follow Axios on YouTube. |
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