Ten Facts About the State of the Union Address
from The Water's Edge

Ten Facts About the State of the Union Address

President Biden will deliver the annual State of the Union address on Thursday night. Here are ten things you might not know about the tradition of having a president deliver an annual address.
President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address on February 7, 2023, in Washington, DC.
President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address on February 7, 2023, in Washington, DC. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via Reuters

President Joe Biden is set to deliver the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Thursday night. While we wait to see what Biden will say, I thought I would resurface my primer on ten facts worth knowing about the State of the Union.

1. The State of the Union address wasn’t always called that. Presidents from George Washington through Herbert Hoover called their annual message to Congress just that, the “Annual Message.” FDR began the tradition of calling it "the State of the Union address.”

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2. The tradition of giving a State of the Union address is rooted in the U.S. Constitution. Article II, Section 3 stipulates: The president “shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.” Although the Constitution doesn’t define “from time to time,” by tradition presidents convey that message once each year. The Constitution says nothing about when or how the president should deliver the information. Until 1934, the State of the Union message was typically delivered in December rather than January or February. In 2022, Biden became the first president to deliver an in-person State of the Union address in March. So his address on Thursday night will be just the second one delivered in March.

3. For more than a century, the State of the Union was delivered to Congress in writing rather than in a speech before a joint session of Congress. George Washington delivered the first State of the Union address—or “Annual Message” if you prefer—in person and in New York. (The Big Apple was the capital of the United States from 1785 to 1790.) John Adams did likewise during his one term in office. Thomas Jefferson, however, abandoned the in-person speech for a written message, perhaps because he wasn’t a great public speaker. Presidents followed Jefferson’s lead until 1913, when Woodrow Wilson revived the practice of addressing a joint session of Congress. Ever since FDR, presidents have almost always used speeches rather than written messages to fulfill their constitutional obligation to inform Congress about the State of the Union.

4. Ronald Reagan began the tradition of not calling a president’s first speech to a joint session of Congress a State of the Union address. Reagan’s predecessors had no qualms about giving a State of the Union address immediately upon assuming office. John F. Kennedy, for instance, gave a State of the Union speech on January 30, 1961, ten days after taking the oath of office. (That speech stands as the most alarming State of the Union address ever delivered. Kennedy said that the nation was at an “hour of national peril,” that “the American economy is in trouble,” “our cities are engulfed in squalor,” and “our supply of clean water is dwindling,” but that “all these problems pale when placed beside those which confront us around the world” as “we draw nearer the hour of maximum danger.” So much for the “good old days.”) Reagan, however, called his 1981 speech an “Address Before a Joint Session of Congress on the Program for Economic Recovery.” All of Reagan’s successors, including Biden, have followed that precedent and declined to call their first speech to a joint session of Congress a State of the Union address. George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush called their messages “Administration Goals” speeches. Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Biden called their first speeches an “Address Before a Joint Session of Congress.”

5. During presidential transition years, Congress sometimes receives annual messages from two presidents within a span of weeks. Outgoing presidents can give a State of the Union address even if the incoming president is likely to do the same. Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, Lyndon Johnson, Gerald Ford, and Jimmy Carter all delivered an annual message in their final weeks in office, though only LBJ and Ford did it as a speech to a joint session of Congress.

6. Some presidents go short in their State of the Union addresses, some go long—very long. Washington holds the record for brevity, using just 1,089 words in 1790. That’s slightly longer than a newspaper op-ed. Among presidents since LBJ, Richard Nixon holds the record for shortest State of the Union address. His 1972 address clocked in at a shade under twenty-nine minutes. Carter holds the record for the longest State of the Union address. His 1981 address, which he (thankfully) delivered to Congress in writing rather than in person, ran 33,667 words. That’s fifteen hundred words longer than H.G. Wells’s classic novel, The Time Machine. (Carter’s 19981 address is also the last time the State of the Union was delivered in writing.)

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Clinton holds the record for the longest State of the Union address delivered in person, whether that is measured by the number of words (9,190 in 1995) or by the time it took to deliver (one hour, twenty-eight minutes, and forty-nine seconds in 2000). Biden’s address to Congress last year ran for one hour and thirteen minutes, or eleven minutes longer than his 2022 address.

7. The prose in State of the Union addresses has gotten simpler over time. The linguistic complexity of State of the Union addresses has declined over the past century as presidents shifted from speaking to lawmakers to addressing the country at large.

SOTU Language

8. Two presidents never delivered an Annual Message or State of the Union address. William Henry Harrison and James Garfield both died before they had the chance to deliver one, Harrison from disease in 1841 and Garfield from an assassin’s bullet in 1881.

9. Technology has expanded the audience for the State of the Union address, but that doesn’t mean that more Americans are listening. Calvin Coolidge was the first president to have his State of the Union message broadcast on radio (1923). Truman was the first president to have his State of the Union message broadcast on television (1947). Clinton was the first president to have his State of the Union message broadcast over the Internet (1997).

The proliferation of ways to hear the State of the Union live hasn’t led to a surge of people listening to what presidents have to say. Indeed, the television audience for the State of the Union has fallen sharply over the past three decades. In 1993, nearly 67 million people watched at least part of what Bill Clinton had to say. (Again, that speech was not officially a State of the Union address, though that technicality no doubt was lost on the audience.) In comparison, 27.3 million people tuned in to Biden’s address last year. The television audience numbers fell by more than half even though the population of the United States grew by nearly 30 percent in the intervening three decades. In all, State of the Union speeches, and their sibling, the “Address Before a Joint Session of Congress,” are not must-see TV.

SOTU views

10. Most State of the Union addresses are remembered only by those who wrote them, but the ones with a lasting impact have tackled foreign policy. James Monroe announced the Monroe Doctrine in his annual message in 1823. Theodore Roosevelt added his corollary to the Monroe Doctrine in his annual message in 1904. FDR unveiled his “Four Freedoms” in his 1941 State of the Union address. And George W. Bush warned of the “Axis of Evil” in his 2002 State of the Union address. Foreign policy will likely take a back seat to domestic policy in Biden’s address on Thursday night.

Sinet Adous assisted in the preparation of this post.

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