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OPINION

What Should President Trump Say at His State of the Union on Tuesday?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
What Should President Trump Say at His State of the Union on Tuesday?
AP Photo/Evan Vucci

America is tired.

Not tired of debate. Not tired of conviction. Americans can handle disagreement. What they are weary of is perpetual combat. They are weary of the temperature always being set at boiling. They are weary of economic anxiety, cultural distrust and political trench warfare that seems to reward outrage more than results.

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If President Donald Trump truly wants to secure not only victory but legacy, this is the moment for a different kind of speech.

Not a rally speech. Not a grievance speech. Not a score-settling speech. A governing speech.

He should begin with humility — not weakness, but strength under control.

He should say plainly, "I know this country is divided. I know many Americans — Republican, Democrat, independent — are struggling. And I am the president for all of you."

That sentence alone would shift the national mood.

Address Economic Pain First

Across the board, Americans are feeling squeezed. Housing costs remain high. Groceries are unpredictable. Insurance premiums are punishing families. Small businesses face borrowing constraints. Young Americans feel locked out of ownership and stability. Retirees worry their savings will not stretch far enough.

The president should acknowledge this without defensiveness.

He should say, "If you are working harder but falling behind, I see you. If you own a small business and feel crushed by regulation and rising costs, I see you. If you are a single parent trying to keep up, I see you."

Then he should outline clear relief:

  • Targeted tax relief for working- and middle-class Americans
  • Regulatory reform that lowers costs without sacrificing safety
  • Incentives for domestic manufacturing and energy independence
  • Real housing supply expansion — zoning reform incentives, public-private partnerships
  • Student loan reform tied to workforce outcomes

Economic relief must not be ideological — it must be practical.

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Tone Down Deportation Rhetoric

Immigration is a legitimate national issue. Border security matters. Sovereignty matters. Law matters. But tone also matters.

The president can secure the border without dehumanizing those here.

He should say, "We are a nation of laws, and we will enforce them. But we are also a nation of dignity. Our immigration enforcement will prioritize criminals and threats to public safety. Families who are contributing members of society deserve fairness and due process."

He should clarify that deportation efforts will focus on violent offenders, traffickers, cartel affiliates — not long-settled families whose children are American citizens.

The rhetoric should move from mass punishment to measured enforcement — strength without spectacle.

Stop Punishing Intra-Party Independence

Political maturity means tolerating disagreement within your own ranks. If a Republican member agrees with the president 90 percent of the time but dissents on 10 percent, that is not betrayal — that is representative government.

The president should publicly affirm this.

He should say, "We are a big party. We are a coalition. Not everyone will agree with me on everything. That is healthy. I welcome debate. I do not require loyalty to me — I require loyalty to the Constitution and to the American people."

Threatening primaries for every deviation shrinks leadership into insecurity. Great leaders expand their coalitions. They do not purge them.

Ronald Reagan governed with Democrats. Bill Clinton worked with Republicans. Even in polarized times, results came from unlikely partnerships.

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Trump has the leverage to demand unity — but unity achieved by intimidation is fragile. Unity built on shared purpose endures.

Work With Democrats Where Possible

The American people do not wake up asking which party "won" the day before. They ask whether their lives improved.

There are areas of potential bipartisan agreement:

  • Infrastructure modernization
  • Pharmaceutical pricing reform
  • Domestic semiconductor production
  • Veteran mental health services
  • Human trafficking enforcement
  • Supply chain resilience

The president should say, "To my Democratic colleagues: Where we agree, let us move quickly. Where we disagree, let us debate vigorously -- but respectfully. The American people expect results, not performance."

This does not mean abandoning conservative principles. It means understanding that divided government demands statesmanship.

Lower the Temperature

America does not need less conviction. It needs less contempt.

The president sets the tone. Markets react to tone. Allies react to tone. Citizens react to tone.

He should say, "We can disagree without hating one another. We can compete without destroying one another. The future of this nation is too important for permanent hostility."

He should reject violence and political intimidation from all sides — explicitly. No ambiguity. No winks. No plausible deniability.

A single sentence could calm the waters:

"There is no place for violence or harassment in American politics -- from anyone."

Speak to Legacy

At this stage, Trump has already reshaped American politics. The question now is how history will record him.

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As a disruptor only? Or as a builder?

As a fighter? Or as a unifier who understood when to pivot from campaign mode to country mode?

If he delivers a speech grounded in empathy, discipline, constitutional respect and bipartisan pragmatism, he will not lose his base. He will expand it.

Americans are not demanding perfection. They are asking for relief, stability and a break from constant escalation.

Leadership is not merely dominating the news cycle. It is calming the nation.

The country does not need another war speech. It needs a restoration speech.

If Trump chooses that path, he could do more than win the next election cycle. He could help heal a divided republic.

And that would be the most enduring victory of all.

Armstrong Williams is manager/sole owner of Howard Stirk Holdings I & II Broadcast Television Stations and the 2016 Multicultural Media Broadcast owner of the year. To find out more about him and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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