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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has issued a new invitation to President Donald Trump to give his State of the Union speech on 5 February.
The formal letter dated Monday, 28 January, suggested that Trump would reschedule the speech after it was postponed because of the partial government shutdown. Trump and Congress had reached a deal on Friday, 25 January, to reopen the government, which had been Pelosi's condition for allowing Trump to speak.
Pelosi said in her letter that she and Trump spoke on Monday and agreed on the new date. She wrote:
The House and Senate still must pass a resolution officially inviting Trump to speak to a joint session of Congress.
Trump had earlier said he was postponing his State of the Union address until the partial government shutdown ended, yielding after a week-long showdown with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Following a high-stakes game of dare and double-dare, Trump had conceded on Wednesday night, 23 January, that "no venue can compete with the history, tradition and importance of the House Chamber."
Pelosi had taken the step after Trump said he planned to show up in spite of Democratic objections to the speech taking place with large swaths of the government shutdown.
Denied that grand venue, Trump promised to come up with some sort of alternative event. The White House scrambled to find a site matching the gravitas of the traditional address from the rostrum of the House to lawmakers from both parties, Supreme Court justices, invited guests and a television audience of millions.
"As the Shutdown was going on, Nancy Pelosi asked me to give the State of the Union Address. I agreed," Trump tweeted shortly after 11 pm EST. "She then changed her mind because of the Shutdown, suggesting a later date. This is her prerogative – I will do the Address when the Shutdown is over (sic)."
Fireworks over the speech shot back and forth between the Capitol and the White House as the month-long partial government shutdown showed no signs of ending and about 800,000 federal workers faced the prospect of going without their second paycheck in a row come Friday, 25 January.
Pelosi told Trump the House wouldn't approve a resolution, allowing him to address Congress until the shutdown ended. Trump shot back that Pelosi was afraid of hearing the truth.
"I think that's a great blotch on the incredible country that we all love," Trump had said earlier on Wednesday, 23 January.
The drama surrounding the State of the Union address began last week when Pelosi asked Trump to make other plans but stopped short of denying him the chamber for his address. Trump called her bluff on Wednesday in a letter, saying he intended to come anyway.
Pelosi quickly squelched the speech, writing back that the House "will not consider a concurrent resolution authorising the President's State of the Union address in the House Chamber until government has opened."
The president cannot speak in front of a joint session of Congress without both chambers' explicit permission.
The gamesmanship unfolded as the Senate prepared to vote this week on duelling proposals on the shutdown. A Republican one would give Trump money for the wall while one from Democrats would re-open government through 8 February, with no wall money, giving bargainers time to talk about it.
Both proposals were likely to fail to reach the 60-vote threshold needed in the Senate, where Republicans hold a 53-47 majority. As well, House Democrats were putting forward a new proposal, aiming to lure Trump away from his demand for a border wall by offering billions of new dollars for other border security measures.
The Constitution states only that the president "shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union," meaning the president can speak anywhere he chooses or give his update in writing.
The address has been delayed before.
But there is no precedent for a State of the Union invitation being rescinded.
Presidents Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower and Jimmy Carter issued their final messages in print. As Eisenhower recovered from a heart attack in 1956, he prepared a seven-minute, filmed summary of the message from his retreat in Key West, Florida, that was broadcast nationwide.
Richard Nixon sent a printed message in 1973; his staff said an oral message would have come too soon after his second inaugural address.
Nevertheless, they were rattled by Pelosi's move on Wednesday and expressed concern it would further sour shutdown negotiations.
Officials have been considering a speech in the Senate chamber and a visit to a state on the southern border. Multiple versions of the speech were being drafted to suit the final venue. Trump has been presented with a series of options for making the address and is expected to decide within the next day or so, said a person familiar with White House discussions but not authorised to speak publicly about them.
Pelosi said that when she extended her 3 January invitation to Trump to deliver the State of the Union address on 29 January, there was no thought that the government would still be shut down.
She wrote on Wednesday:
Moments after her letter became public, Trump told reporters he wasn't surprised by Pelosi's action. Democrats have become "radicalised," he claimed. He expanded on those sentiments during a subsequent event at the White House, calling the cancellation a "disgrace" and asserting that Pelosi didn't want to hear the truth about the need for better border security.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with The Associated Press)
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