Global News Podcast - Bonus: President Trump addresses Congress
Episode Date: March 5, 2025Donald Trump has delivered the longest ever presidential speech to Congress. In this extra edition, we go to Washington for analysis of his address....
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You're listening to a special edition of the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
Hello, I'm Oliver Conway and we're recording this at 4.30 GMT on Wednesday the 5th of March.
Donald Trump has delivered the longest ever presidential speech to Congress.
He said he'd accomplished more since returning to power 43 days ago than most administrations do in
four or eight years. On Ukraine, he thanked President Zelensky for reaching out and said he'd received strong
signals from Russia that it is ready for peace.
The US leader also defended his imposition of tariffs on America's main trading partners
while acknowledging they could cause disruption.
There were frequent chants of USA from Republicans and protests from Democrats, one of who was kicked
out of the chamber. We'll hear the main points of the President's speech and get analysis
from Washington.
Every year the US President gives an address to the joint Houses of the US Congress, highlighting
recent achievements and outlining priorities for the year ahead. It's a chance to speak directly to a huge television audience. President
Donald Trump, a consummate showman, has been a near permanent fixture on our screen since
his second inauguration just over six weeks ago. But the speech on Tuesday night primetime
allowed him to use the full political pageantry of the United States to get his message across.
To my fellow citizens, America is back. USA! USA! USA! USA!
Mr Trump spoke for more than an hour and a half, the longest ever presidential speech to Congress,
covering tariffs, illegal immigration and free speech.
There were cheers from Republicans and some protests from Democrats. The House
Speaker Mike Johnson even ordered Democratic Congressman Al Green to be removed from the
chamber for heckling Mr Trump. Here's a flavour of the event.
Mr Green, take your seat. Take your seat, sir. Take your seat.
Finding that members continue to engage in willful and concerted disruption of proper decorum, the chair now directs the sergeant-at-arms to restore order.
Remove this gentleman from the chamber.
America's momentum is back. Our spirit is back. Our pride is back. Our spirit is back.
Our pride is back.
Our confidence is back.
And the American dream is surging bigger and better than ever before.
The American dream is unstoppable, and our country is on the verge of a comeback
The likes of which the world has never witnessed and perhaps will never witness again I have created the brand new Department of Government Efficiency
Which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight.
Thank you, Elon.
He's working very hard.
He didn't need this.
Thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Everybody here, even this side, appreciates it, I believe. They just don't want to admit that.
Tariffs are not just about protecting American jobs.
They're about protecting the soul of our country.
Tariffs are about making America rich again and making America great again.
And it's happening and it will happen rather quickly.
There'll be a little disturbance, but we're okay with that.
It won't be much, but we will take in trillions and trillions of dollars and create jobs like
we have never seen before.
We have been ripped off for decades by nearly every country on earth and we will not let
that happen any longer.
Earlier today, I received an important letter
from President Zelensky of Ukraine.
I appreciate that he sent this letter.
Just got it a little while ago.
Simultaneously, we've had serious discussions with Russia
and have received strong signals that they are ready for peace.
Wouldn't that be beautiful? Wouldn't that be beautiful?
It's time to stop this madness. It's time to halt the killing.
It's time to end this senseless war.
If you want to end wars, you have to talk to both sides.
My fellow Americans, get ready for an incredible future,
because the Golden Age of America has only just begun.
It will be like nothing that has ever been seen before.
Thank you, God bless you you and God bless America.
Donald Trump there. The democratic response to his address came from Senator Elisa Slotkin.
America is not perfect, but I stand with the majority of Americans who believe we are still
exceptional,
unparalleled.
And I would rather have American leadership over Chinese or Russian leadership any day
of the week.
Because for generations, America has offered something better.
Our security and our prosperity, yes, but our democracy, our very system of government,
has been the aspiration of the world.
And right now, it's at risk.
It's at risk when the president decides you can pick and choose what rules you want to
follow, when he ignores court orders and the Constitution itself, or when elected leaders
stand by and just let it happen.
But it's also at risk when the president pits Americans against each other, when he
demonizes those who are different
and tells certain people they shouldn't be included,
because America is not just a patch of land
between two oceans.
We are more than that.
Senator Elisa Slotkin.
Well, just after President Trump finished speaking,
I spoke to our correspondent in Washington, Merlyn Thomas,
and asked what she made of it.
He had a laundry list of his successes successes and that's how he really started off
talking about how America is back that this was the revival of the American
Dream but he touched on two main focuses of his speech which were really
immigration and also those culture war issues that we heard about and on those
culture war issues he spent quite a lot of time talking
about how he was cracking down on diversity, equity and inclusion issues, cracking down
on some of those trigger point issues as well. So when he talked about renaming the Gulf
of Mexico to the Gulf of America, making English the official language of the US, as well as
then moving on to someone who he has been very keen to
emphasize the presence of, Elon Musk, the tech billionaire and unelected advisor
who is leading the mission to reform and reshape the federal government and he
leads Doge, the Department of Government Efficiency. And President Trump listed
off a number of those things that he claims are savings that Doge had
identified and it's worth saying that there were a number of those things that he claims were savings that Doge had identified. And it's
worth saying that there were a number of misleading statements in his speech. There aren't very
transparent figures on Doge's website about the savings that are made. And BBC Verify
have actually contacted the White House about those numbers, but haven't received a response.
And the thing that we've all really been listening out for,
the issue of Ukraine, we heard him strike a more conciliatory tone. We heard that President
Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, had sent him a letter saying that he was ready to sign
up for peace and ready to sign that minerals deal any time. But we also heard that he had
spoken to Russia as well because he said we've had
serious discussions with Russia and have received strong signals that they are ready for peace.
So that's really significant too. Although Ukraine really was very much in the latter
half of his speech, it was a very long address, the longest in history. But still it was significant
that he did touch on it.
Yeah, I mean, I guess for many Americans, they're not so interested in what happens
overseas, and that's why a lot of the focus was on domestic issues. With regard to Elon
Musk, that was a very long section where he listed all the apparent areas where money
has been wasted. I wonder if they're doing that because they feel some Americans
are beginning to push back at what is happening at that department. He also spoke about trying
to get the price of eggs down and he tried to blame that on Joe Biden. So is there some
sense he is sort of starting to feel a bit of pushback from some in the American population?
If he is feeling any pushback, he was trying not to show any of it because he really took
a very proud and emphatic tone in how he wanted to say, you know, in his first six weeks in
term, he's proud of what he's done.
And in terms of those figures on Doge, it's worth saying that some of the democratic lawmakers
did bring in as guests fired federal workers.
So that will be something that really was a point of friction
between the two parties there. You had on one side standing ovation for Elon Musk, the
man behind all of these cuts in the federal government. And then on the other hand, you
have people who have been fired because of those cuts.
But on the international front, as you say, he spoke about Ukraine. He also spoke about tariffs, said the US was going to take trillions of dollars from those. And again, two of those
other countries that he's been interested in, Greenland and Panama, he also spoke about
those.
Yeah, and I think it's interesting that he continued to talk about tariffs as a central
part of his economic vision. You know, we've heard time and time again that they may be being used as a negotiating tactic, as a way to bring countries to the
table and use tariffs as a way of leveraging that in areas entirely outside of the economy.
But the fact that he continues to bring it up is also an indication that he sees it as
central to his economic vision in ways of growing the US economy and raising
tax revenue as well. So it's not just a temporary tactic. It could be something that he believes
and I quote, he said, it protects the soul of our country.
And just a little bit on that sort of division that we saw in Congress between the Democrats
and the Republicans, very stark.
Yes, we saw an outburst of opposition from people like Al Green, who is a Democratic
representative, who stood up and was engaged in a long harangue between him and the president
when he took his cane and pointed it towards him and he was then escorted out of the chambers.
And elsewhere we just saw icy silence from the other Democratic lawmakers holding up
signs saying that Musk steals. Now and again we'd see a sign that says that's a lie. elsewhere, we just saw icy silence from the other Democratic lawmakers holding up signs
saying that Musk steals. Now and again, we'd see a sign that says that's a lie. So those
are the kind of voices of opposition that we were seeing. But really, this was an emphatic
return of President Trump saying that I have much more to do.
Merlin Thomas in Washington.
And that is all from this extra edition of the Global News Podcast. It was mixed by Caroline Washington.