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Richard Nixon's address to joint session of Congress (September 9, 1971)
Nixon Administration Presidential Addresses |
On Sept. 9, 1971, President Richard Nixon delivered an address to a joint session of Congress at 12:30 p.m. EST. Nixon used the address to outline his economic plan, including tax policy, preventing the increase of government spending, and encouraging investment.[1]
The president can deliver a joint address before both the House of Representatives and Senate upon invitation from both chambers. This is typically done by presidents in order to speak on specific topics.
Joint sessions require both chambers to pass concurrent resolutions to conduct formal business.[2]
Nixon’s address to a joint session of Congress
Transcript
The following text is a transcript of Nixon's address, as prepared for delivery:
“ |
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, my colleagues in the Congress, our distinguished guests: I come before this special joint session to ask the cooperation of the Congress in achieving a great goal: a new prosperity without war and without inflation. In this century, Americans have never before had a full generation of peace. In the past 40 years, we have had only 2 years with real prosperity, without war and without inflation. As a result of major initiatives in the field of foreign policy, I believe that as America is bringing to a conclusion the longest and most difficult war in its history, we can look forward with confidence to a generation of peace today. Yet we confront this irony: As the dangers of war recede, the challenges of peace increase. It is customary for a President to ask the Congress for bipartisan support in meeting the challenges of war. Today I come before you to ask bipartisan support in meeting the challenges of peace. In achieving our goal, we find ourselves confronted at the outset by three problems: The first is a legacy of war. Two million men have been cut back from our Armed Forces and defense plants because of our success in winding down the war in Vietnam. As part of the transition from a wartime to a peacetime economy, we now have to find jobs for these men--jobs producing for peace instead of war. The second problem is also a legacy of war. We must stop the rise in the cost of living. The third problem is a legacy not of war, but of peaceful progress in the world over the past 25 years--progress which has altered dramatically the balance in the economic relationships between the United States and the other great trading nations of the world. As a result, we today are challenged to protect the value of the dollar and to learn once again to be competitive in the world. Twenty-five days ago I took action to attack these problems, to advance the goal of a new prosperity without war and without inflation. I ordered a 90-day freeze on prices and wages. I ordered a $4.7 billion cut in Federal spending to allow for tax cuts to create new jobs. On the international front, I ordered a temporary 10 percent surcharge on products imported from abroad, and I ordered the convertibility of the dollar into gold suspended. Now, in taking these actions, I knew there were great risks. There were dire predictions of massive resentment, noncooperation at home, and of turmoil and retaliation abroad. But that did not happen. Here at home, we can be proud of the fact that millions of Americans have shown that they are willing to give up wage increases and price increases that would benefit some of the people, in order to stop the rise in the cost of living for all of the people. And then, as we look abroad, we find that adjustments are being made and actions are being taken to set up a new monetary system within which America can compete fairly once again. Instead of continued talk about the weakness of the American dollar, we now find in the world a new understanding of the strength of the American economy. The reaction of the American people to the new economic policy has been unselfish and courageous. The reaction of our trading partners abroad has been measured and constructive. I ask the Congress to respond in a similar spirit, as the Congress has to so many other great challenges in the past. This is a time to set aside partisanship. Let us join together in placing the national interest above special interests in America. I ask the Congress to consider as its first priority--before all other business--the enactment of three tax proposals that are essential to the new prosperity. These three measures will create 500,000 new jobs in the coming year. First, I urge the Congress to remove the 7 percent excise tax on automobiles so that the more than 8 million people in this country who will buy new, American built cars in the next year will save an average of $200 each. This is a sales tax, paid by the consumer. Its removal will stimulate sales, and every 100,000 additional automobiles sold will mean 25,000 additional jobs for America's workers. Second, I urge the Congress to adopt a job development credit to encourage investment in machinery and equipment that will generate new jobs. This credit was advocated by a Democratic President and enacted by a Democratic Congress in the 1960's. It was enormously effective then in creating new jobs. It will be just as effective in creating new jobs now, today. First, it will be an incentive to business to him more workers. It will enable wage earners to work more productively, and it will make American products more competitive in the world's markets. And third, I urge the Congress to create more consumer purchasing power by permitting the planned $50 increase in the personal income tax exemption scheduled for 1973 to take effect next January 1, one full year ahead of schedule. For a family of four, this could mean an additional $200 increase in tax-exempt income beginning less than 4 months from now. Taken together, these tax proposals that I ask the Congress to enact would reduce taxes now paid by individuals by $3.2 billion, and would provide $2.7 billion in incentives to companies to invest in job producing equipment. There is another vital area in which I ask the cooperation of the Congress, and that is the area of budget restraint. Tax cuts to stimulate employment must be accompanied by spending cuts to restrain inflation. Among the spending cuts that I have ordered are the following: I have ordered a postponement of scheduled pay raises for Federal employees. I have ordered a 5 percent reduction in Government employment. And I have ordered a 10 percent cut in foreign economic aid. Because the Congress has not yet enacted two of my principal legislative proposals-welfare reform and revenue sharing--I have recommended that their effective dates be postponed, 3 months for revenue sharing, x year for welfare reform. This adjustment recognizes that there is no longer sufficient time to get the administrative machinery in place by the previously scheduled dates. Now, in the coming year this Congress will face many temptations to raise spending and to cut taxes in addition to the recommendations I have made. I understand those temptations. In the short run, they will be very popular proposals. But as we look at the realities of our budget at this time, we must face up to this hard fact: Any additional spending increases not accompanied by tax increases--and any additional tax cuts not accompanied by spending cuts--will be certain to start us again on a spiral of higher prices. To spend more than we can afford, or to tax less than we can afford, is the sure route to prices higher than we can afford. I ask, therefore, that the Congress be responsible in recognizing these realities. There are two other matters in which I seek the cooperation of the Congress. The first concerns the immediate future, and the second the long-range future of America in the world. The 90-day freeze on wages and prices that I announced on August 15 was a temporary measure, to hold the line while the next phase of stabilization was discussed. I am announcing today that the freeze will not be extended beyond 90 days. But I assure the Congress and the American people that when this temporary and necessarily drastic action is over, we shall take all the steps needed to see that America is not again afflicted by the virus of runaway inflation. The system of wage and price stabilization that follows the freeze will require the fullest possible cooperation not only between the executive and legislative branches but also by all Americans. I am announcing today that I have invited representatives of the Congress, of business, of labor, and of agriculture to meet with me within the next few days for the purpose of helping plan the next phase. They have all accepted the invitation. In addition, I have directed the members of the Cost of Living Council to continue meeting with representatives of all other interested groups. As we consider what follows the freeze, let us bear in mind that prosperity is a job for everyone--and that fighting inflation is everybody's business. Let us remember also, that nothing would be more detrimental to the new prosperity in the long run than to put this Nation's great, strong free enterprise system in a permanent straitjacket of Government controls. Regimentation and Government coercion must never become a way of life in the United States of America. That means that price and wage stabilization, in whatever form it takes, must be only a way station on the road to free markets and free collective bargaining in a new prosperity without war. Freedom brought America where it is today, and freedom is the road to the future for America. Now, the long-term matter on which I seek the cooperation of the Congress centers on this fact: We must set as our goal today an economy that within 10 years will provide 100 million jobs for America. To meet that goal, we need new tax incentives, other than the one I have discussed today, for the creation of additional jobs. And to meet that goal, we need new programs to insure that America's enormous wealth of scientific and technological talent is used to its fullest in the production for peace. Later today, in this great chamber, the Congress will pay tribute to three splendid Americans back from the moon. Theirs was a magnificent achievement, a stunning testament to their personal skill and courage, and also to what American technology can achieve. Let us find the means to insure that in this decade of challenge, the remarkable technology that took these Americans to the moon can also be applied to reaching our goals here on earth. That is why, in the next session of the Congress, I shall present new proposals in both these areas: tax reform to create new jobs and new programs to insure the maximum enlistment of America's technology in meeting the challenges of peace. Achieving these goals will be in the vital interest of the United States not just for the next year, not just for the next 10 years, but for the balance of this century, and beyond. I look forward to working with the Congress, to getting the best thinking of the Congress in preparing for this great experience. As we consider these new economic policies, it is important that all of us here today consider the stakes that are involved. America has entered a new era in its economic relationships with the rest of the world. For a quarter of a century, now, since the end of World War II, America has borne the principal burden of free world defense, of foreign aid, of helping old nations back onto their feet and new nations to take their first, sometimes faltering, steps. We have paid out nearly $150 billion in foreign aid, economic and military, over the past 25 years. We have fought two costly and grueling wars. We have undergone deep strains at home as we have sought to reconcile our responsibilities abroad with our own needs here in America. In this quarter century, America has given generously of itself and of its resources--and we have done this because we are America, and America is a good and a generous nation. In the years ahead, we will remain a good and a generous nation--but the time has come to give a new attention to America's own interests here at home. Fifteen years ago a prominent world statesman put this problem that we confronted then in a very effective way. He commented to me that world trade was like a poker game in which the United States then had all the chips, and that we had to spread them around so that others could play. What he said was true in the 1940's. It was partially true in the fifties and, also, even partially true in the early sixties. It is no longer true today. We have generously passed out the chips. Now others can play on an equal basis--and we must play the game as we expect and want them to do. We must play, that means, the best we know how. The time has passed for the United States to compete with one hand tied behind her back. This new era is a time of new relationships in the world, of a changed balance of economic power, of new challenges to our leadership and to our standard of living. And, my colleagues in the Congress, we should not be resentful of these changes. They mean that more of the world's people are living better than before. They help make the world a better and a more stable and a safer place for all of us. But they also present us with a new set of challenges-the challenges of peace. The time has come for the United States to show once again that spirit that transformed a small nation, a weak nation, a nation of 3 million people on the precarious edge of an untamed continent, into the world's strongest and richest power. In this new era, we must find the roots of our national greatness once again. In order to meet the challenges of peace, we must have a healthy America-a strong America. We need a healthy and productive economy in order to achieve the great goals to which we all are so firmly committed: --To help those who cannot help themselves. --To feed the hungry. --To provide better health care for the sick. --To provide better education for our children. --To provide more fully for the aged. --To restore and renew our natural environment. --To provide more and better jobs and more and greater opportunity for all of our people. To accomplish these great goals requires many billions of dollars. We cannot accomplish them without a healthy economy. We cannot accomplish them without the revenues generated by the work of more than 80 million Americans. And, my colleagues in the Congress, we cannot accomplish these goals if we make the mistake of disparaging and undermining "the system" that produces America's wealth---of casting it in the false light of an oppressor and exploiter of human beings. We can be proud of the fact that the much maligned American "system" has produced more abundance, more widely shared, and more opportunity for more people than any other system, any time, any place in the history of man. And it is that very system that makes it possible for us to help the poor, makes it possible for us to feed the hungry, to clean up our environment, to meet all the other great goals which we have set for ourselves as a nation. As we correct what is wrong in this nation, let us always speak up for what is right about America. To be a healthy nation, a strong nation, we need also to restore the health of our government institutions. That is why I again urge the Congress to act in this session on the sweeping reorganization of the executive branch which I proposed, in order to make it more efficient, more manageable, more responsive to the needs and wishes of the people. That is why I again urge the Congress to act in this session on the far-reaching proposals of revenue sharing which I have proposed, to help revitalize our State and local governments and to ease the crushing rise in the burden of property taxes in this country. And that is why I again urge the Congress to act in this session on welfare reform. Let us bring under control a system that has become a suffocating burden on State and local taxpayers and a massive outrage against the people it was designed to help. Let us get rid of a system where going on welfare is more profitable than going to work. The postponements that I have recommended in the funding of these programs have been made necessary by past legislative delays. Let us make sure that there will be no further delays. All of these programs--all of our new economic programs that I have described today--will mean nothing, however, unless the American spirit is strong and healthy, the spirit of our people across this land. In recent weeks I have traveled back and forth across this country--in Maine and New Hampshire, New York, Idaho, Wyoming, California, Texas, Ohio, Illinois--and I can say with confidence that on the farms and in the cities, in the towns and the factories throughout this Nation the spirit of the American people is strong. It is healthy. A strong and healthy spirit means a willingness to sacrifice, and Americans are willing to sacrifice, when a short-term personal sacrifice is needed in the long-term public interest. A strong and healthy spirit means a willingness to work. Hard work is what made America great. There could be no more dangerous delusion than the notion that we can maintain the standard of living that our own people sometimes complain about, but the rest of the world envies, without continuing to work hard. The "good life" is not the lazy life or the empty life or the life that consumes without producing. The "good life" is the active, productive, working life--the life that gives as well as gets. No work is demeaning or beneath a person's dignity if it provides food for his table and clothes and shelter for his children. The thing that is demeaning is for a man to refuse work and then to ask someone else who works to pay taxes to keep him on welfare. Let us recognize once and for all in America that any work is preferable to welfare. A strong and healthy spirit means having a sense of destiny. As we look ahead 5, 10, 20 years, what do we see? We could see an America grown old and weary, past its prime, in its declining years. Or, we could see an America proud and strong, as vigorous in its maturity as it was in its youth. We hold the future in our hands. We have consulted our fears too much. Now let us be inspired by our faith. If our forefathers had consulted their fears we would not be here today. America would never have been discovered. The West would have never been explored. Our freedom would never have been defended. Our abundance would never have been created. As we renew our faith, let the challenge of competition give a new lift to the American spirit. A nation becomes old only when it stops trying to be great. That is why we cannot remain a great nation if we build a permanent wall of tariffs and quotas around the United States and let the rest of the world pass us by. We cannot live behind a wall that shuts out the rest of the world. The world is too small, and the United States is too important a part of that world. If we were not a great power, we would not be the America we know. If we do not stay a great power, the world will not stay safe for free men. We cannot turn inward. We cannot drop out of competition with the rest of the world and remain a great nation. Because when a nation ceases to compete, when it ceases to try to do its best, then that nation ceases to be a great nation. America today is number one in the world economically. Let's keep America number one in the world economically. General de Gaulle once said that France is never her true self unless she is engaged in a great enterprise. My colleagues in the Congress, America can be her true self only when she is engaged in a great enterprise. To build a full generation of peace is a great enterprise. To help the poor and feed the hungry, to provide better health and housing and education, to clean up the environment, to bring new dignity and security to the aging, to guarantee equal opportunity for every American--all these are great enterprises. To build the strong economy that makes all these possible--to meet the new challenges of peace, to move to a new prosperity without war and without inflation-this truly is a great enterprise, worthy of our sacrifice, worthy of our cooperation, and worthy of the greatness of a great people.[3] |
” |
—President Richard Nixon (R), Sept. 9, 1971 [1] |
Designated survivor
For some speeches, a member of the president's Cabinet is chosen to stay in an undisclosed location outside of Washington, D.C. to assume the presidency in case of an attack on Congress, the president, and other high-ranking officials.
While designated survivors have been chosen since at least the 1960s, the federal government did not begin revealing the identity of the designated survivor to the public until 1984.[4]
Background
The following table provides a list of annual and other presidential addresses delivered to joint sessions of Congress between 1790 and 2025. It does not include inaugurations. Click the link in the Occasion or topic column to read more about each address. The information was compiled from the U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Historian.[5]
- President Woodrow Wilson (D), whose administration overlapped with World War I, delivered the most addresses: 23.
- President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D) followed with 19 addresses, which included a joint speech with the ambassador of France in 1934 and an address read before Congress on his behalf in 1945. World War II took place during his administration.
- President Harry S. Truman had the third-most addresses at 16. His administration covered the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold War.
- Among presidents who served between 1981 and 2025, Presidents Ronald Reagan (R) and Barack Obama (D) delivered the most addresses with 11 and 10, respectively.
Presidential addresses to joint sessions of Congress | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Session of Congress | Occasion or topic | President and other speaking dignitaries | |
March 4, 2025 | 119th Congress | Address | President Donald J. Trump | |
March 7, 2024 | 118th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. | |
February 7, 2023 | 118th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. | |
March 1, 2022 | 117th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. | |
April 28, 2021 | 117th Congress | Address | President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. | |
Feb. 4, 2020 | 116th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Donald J. Trump | |
Feb. 5, 2019 | 116th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Donald J. Trump | |
Jan. 30, 2018 | 115th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Donald J. Trump | |
Feb. 28, 2017 | 115th Congress | Address | President Donald J. Trump | |
Jan. 12, 2016 | 114th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 20, 2015 | 114th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 28, 2014 | 113th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Feb. 12, 2013 | 113th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 24, 2012 | 112th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Sept. 8, 2011 | 112th Congress | Address on American Jobs Act | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 25, 2011 | 112th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 27, 2010 | 111th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Sept. 8, 2009 | 111th Congress | Address on Health Care Reform | President Barack H. Obama | |
Feb. 24, 2009 | 111th Congress | Address | President Barack H. Obama | |
Jan. 28, 2008 | 110th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush | |
Jan. 23, 2007 | 110th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush | |
Jan. 31, 2006 | 109th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush | |
Feb. 2, 2005 | 109th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush | |
Jan. 20, 2004 | 108th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush. | |
Jan. 28, 2003 | 108th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush. | |
Jan. 29, 2002 | 107th Congress | State of the Union Address | President George W. Bush. | |
Sept. 20, 2001 | 107th Congress | Address on the War on Terrorism | President George W. Bush. | |
Feb. 27, 2001 | 107th Congress | Budget Message | President George W. Bush. | |
Jan. 27, 2000 | 106th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 19, 1999 | 106th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 27, 1998 | 105th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Feb. 4, 1997 | 105th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 23, 1996 | 104th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 24, 1995 | 104th Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 25, 1994 | 103rd Congress | State of the Union Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Sept. 22, 1993 | 103rd Congress | Address on Health Care Reform | President William J. Clinton. | |
Feb. 17, 1993 | 103rd Congress | Economic Address | President William J. Clinton. | |
Jan. 28, 1992 | 102nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President George Bush. | |
Mar. 6, 1991 | 102nd Congress | Conclusion of Persian Gulf War | President George Bush. | |
Jan. 29, 1991 | 102nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President George Bush. | |
Sept. 11, 1990 | 101st Congress | Invasion of Kuwait by Iraq | President George Bush. | |
Jan. 31, 1990 | 101st Congress | State of the Union Address | President George Bush. | |
Feb. 9, 1989 | 101st Congress | Address on Building a Better America | President George Bush. | |
Jan. 25, 1988 | 100th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Jan. 27, 1987 | 100th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Feb. 4, 1986 | 99th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Nov. 21, 1985 | 99th Congress | Address on Geneva Summit | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Feb. 6, 1985 | 99th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Jan. 25, 1984 | 98th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Apr. 27, 1983 | 98th Congress | Address on Central America | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Jan. 25, 1983 | 98th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Jan. 26, 1982 | 97th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Apr. 28, 1981 | 97th Congress | Address on Economic Recovery--inflation | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Feb. 18, 1981 | 97th Congress | Address on Economic Recovery | President Ronald Reagan. | |
Jan. 23, 1980 | 96th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Jimmy Carter. | |
June 18, 1979 | 96th Congress | Address on Salt II agreements | President Jimmy Carter. | |
Jan. 23, 1979 | 96th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Jimmy Carter. | |
Sept. 18, 1978 | 95th Congress | Address on Middle East Peace agreements | President Jimmy Carter; Joint session attended by Anwar El Sadat, President of Egypt, and by Menachem Begin, Prime Minister of Israel. | |
Jan. 19, 1978 | 95th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Jimmy Carter. | |
Apr. 20, 1977 | 95th Congress | Address on Energy | President Jimmy Carter. | |
Jan. 12, 1977 | 95th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Jan. 19, 1976 | 94th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Apr. 10, 1975 | 94th Congress | Address on State of the World | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Jan. 15, 1975 | 94th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Oct. 8, 1974 | 93rd Congress | Address on the Economy | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Aug. 12, 1974 | 93rd Congress | Assumption of office | President Gerald R. Ford. | |
Jan. 30 1974 | 93rd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
June 1, 1972 | 92nd Congress | Address on Europe trip | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
Jan. 20, 1972 | 92nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
Sept. 9, 1971 | 92nd Congress | Address on Economic policy | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
Jan. 22, 1971 | 92nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
Jan. 22, 1970 | 91st Congress | State of the Union Address | President Richard M. Nixon. | |
Jan. 14, 1969 | 91st Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 17, 1968 | 90th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 10, 1967 | 90th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 12, 1966 | 89th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Mar. 15, 1965 | 89th Congress | Voting rights | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 4, 1965 | 89th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 8, 1964 | 88th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Nov. 27, 1963 | 88th Congress | Assumption of office | President Lyndon B. Johnson. | |
Jan. 14, 1963 | 88th Congress | State of the Union Address | President John F. Kennedy. | |
Jan. 11, 1962 | 87th Congress | State of the Union Address | President John F. Kennedy. | |
May 25, 1961 | 87th Congress | Urgent national needs: foreign aid, defense, civil defense, and outer space | President John F. Kennedy. | |
Jan. 30, 1961 | 87th Congress | State of the Union Address | President John F. Kennedy. | |
Jan. 7, 1960 | 86th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 9, 1959 | 86th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 9, 1958 | 85th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 10, 1957 | 85th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 5, 1957 | 85th Congress | Address on the Middle East | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 6, 1955 | 84th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Jan. 7, 1954 | 83rd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
Feb. 2, 1953 | 83rd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Dwight D. Eisenhower. | |
June 10, 1952 | 82nd Congress | Address on Steel Strike | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 9, 1952 | 82nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 8, 1951 | 82nd Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 4, 1950 | 81st Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 5, 1949 | 81st Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
July 27, 1948 | 80th Congress | Address on inflation, housing, and civil rights | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Apr. 19, 1948 | 80th Congress | Address on 50th anniversary, liberation of Cuba | President Harry S. Truman; Guillermo Belt, Ambassador of Cuba. | |
Mar. 17, 1948 | 80th Congress | National security and conditions in Europe | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 7, 1948 | 80th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Nov. 17, 1947 | 80th Congress | Address on Aid to Europe | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Mar. 12, 1947 | 80th Congress | Address on Greek-Turkish aid policy | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Jan. 6, 1947 | 80th Congress | State of the Union Address | President Harry S. Truman. | |
May 25, 1946 | 79th Congress | Address on Railroad Strike | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Oct. 23, 1945 | 79th Congress | Address on Universal Military Training | President Harry S. Truman. | |
May 21, 1945 | 79th Congress | Address on Bestowal of Congressional Medal of Honor to Tech. Sgt. Jake William Lindsey | General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army; President Harry S. Truman. | |
Apr. 16, 1945 | 79th Congress | Address on Assumption of Office and War | President Harry S. Truman. | |
Mar. 1, 1945 | 79th Congress | Address on Yalta Conference | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 6, 1945 | 79th Congress | Annual Message | President Roosevelt was not present. His message was read before the Joint Session of Congress. | |
Jan. 11, 1944 | 78th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 7, 1943 | 78th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 6, 1942 | 77th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Dec. 8, 1941 | 77th Congress | Address on the "Day of Infamy" | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 6, 1941 | 77th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
May 16, 1940 | 76th Congress | Address on National Defense | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 3, 1940 | 76th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Sept. 21, 1939 | 76th Congress | Address on Neutrality | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Mar. 4, 1939 | 76th Congress | Address on Sesquicentennial of the 1st Congress | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 4, 1939 | 76th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 3, 1938 | 75th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 6, 1937 | 75th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 3, 1936 | 74th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
May 22, 1935 | 74th Congress | Address on Budget Bill Veto | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Jan. 4, 1935 | 74th Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
May 20, 1934 | 73rd Congress | Address on 100th anniversary of the death of the Marquis de Lafayette | Andre de Laboulaye, Ambassador of France; President Franklin Delano Roosevelt; ceremony attended by Count de Chambrun, great-grandson of Lafayette. | |
Jan. 3, 1934 | 73rd Congress | Annual Message | President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | |
Feb. 22, 1932 | 72nd Congress | Address on bicentennial of George Washington's birth | President Herbert Hoover. | |
Dec. 6, 1932 | 72nd Congress | Annual Message | President Herbert Hoover. | |
Dec. 8, 1931 | 72nd Congress | Annual Message | President Herbert Hoover. | |
Dec. 2, 1930 | 71st Congress | Annual Message | President Herbert Hoover. | |
Dec. 3, 1929 | 71st Congress | Annual Message | President Herbert Hoover. | |
Dec. 4, 1928 | 70th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Feb. 22, 1927 | 70th Congress | Address on upcoming George Washington birthday bicentennial | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Dec. 6, 1927 | 70th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Dec. 6, 1926 | 69th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Dec. 8, 1925 | 69th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Dec. 6, 1924 | 68th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Dec. 3, 1923 | 68th Congress | Annual Message | President Calvin Coolidge. | |
Feb. 7, 1923 | 67th Congress | Address on British debt due to the United States | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Dec. 8, 1922 | 67th Congress | Annual Message | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Nov. 21, 1922 | 67th Congress | Address on promotion of the American Merchant Marine | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Aug. 18, 1922 | 67th Congress | Address on coal and railroad strikes | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Feb. 28, 1922 | 67th Congress | Address on maintenance of the Merchant Marine | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Dec. 6, 1921 | 67th Congress | Annual Message | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Apr. 12, 1921 | 67th Congress | Federal problem message | President Warren G. Harding. | |
Aug. 8, 1919 | 66th Congress | Cost of living message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 2, 1918 | 65th Congress | Annual Message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Nov. 11, 1918 | 65th Congress | Terms of armistice signed by Germany | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
May 27, 1918 | 65th Congress | War finance message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Feb. 11, 1918 | 65th Congress | Peace message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Jan. 8, 1918 | 65th Congress | Program for world's peace | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Jan. 4, 1918 | 65th Congress | Federal operation of transportation systems | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 4, 1917 | 65th Congress | Annual Message/War with Austria-Hungary | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Apr. 2, 1917 | 65th Congress | War with Germany | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Feb. 26, 1917 | 64th Congress | Arming of merchant ships | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Feb. 3, 1917 | 64th Congress | Severing diplomatic relations with Germany | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 5, 1916 | 64th Congress | Annual Message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Aug. 29, 1916 | 64th Congress | Railroad message (labor-management dispute) | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 7, 1915 | 64th Congress | Annual Message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 8, 1914 | 63rd Congress | Annual Message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Sept. 4, 1914 | 63rd Congress | War tax message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Apr. 20, 1914 | 63rd Congress | Mexico message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Mar. 5, 1914 | 63rd Congress | Panama Canal tolls | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Jan. 20, 1914 | 63rd Congress | Trusts message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Dec. 2, 1913 | 63rd Congress | Annual Message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Aug. 27, 1913 | 63rd Congress | Mexican affairs message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
June 23, 1913 | 63rd Congress | Currency and bank reform message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Apr. 8, 1913 | 63rd Congress | Tariff message | President Woodrow Wilson. | |
Nov. 22, 1800 | 6th Congress | Annual Message | President John Adams. | |
Dec. 3, 1799 | 6th Congress | Annual Message | President John Adams. | |
Dec. 8, 1798 | 5th Congress | Annual Message | President John Adams. | |
Nov. 23, 1797 | 5th Congress | Annual Message | President John Adams. | |
May 16, 1797 | 5th Congress | Relations with France | President John Adams. | |
Dec. 7, 1796 | 4th Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Dec. 8, 1795 | 4th Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Nov. 19, 1794 | 3rd Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Dec. 3, 1793 | 3rd Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Nov. 6, 1792 | 2nd Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Oct. 25, 1791 | 2nd Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Dec. 8, 1790 | 1st Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. | |
Jan. 8, 1790 | 1st Congress | Annual Message | President George Washington. |
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The American Presidency Project, “Address to the Congress on Stabilization of the Economy,“ Sept. 9, 1971
- ↑ History, Art & Archives of the United States House of Representatives, "Joint Meetings, Joint Sessions, & Inaugurations," accessed Feb. 28, 2022
- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ United States Senate, "Cabinet Members Who Did Not Attend the State of the Union Address," accessed Feb. 23, 2022.
- ↑ United States House of Representatives, "Joint Meetings, Joint Sessions, & Inaugurations," accessed June 14, 2021