During his immigration talking points at the State of the Union, President Biden engaged with Marjorie Taylor Greene on the death of Laken Riley and said he would not “demonize” immigrants.
President Biden made references to the late Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., and his role in the march on Selma, Alabama, as he urged Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act. His mention of the late representative had Speaker Johnson and fellow Republicans standing and cheering.
Biden highlighted his administration's efforts to reverse the climate crisis including cutting carbon emissions and the creation of a climate corps, which is led by young Americans.
President Biden said he wants to expand "high-quality" tutoring and summer learning programs to ensure younger Americans learn to read before third grade. Biden also stated he would like to see public school teachers get pay increases.
Biden reflects on housing and proposes an annual tax credit that gives Americans $400 a month for the next two years during the State of the Union speech.
President Biden detailed the story of Belvidere auto plant in Illinois and his experience walking the picket line. “When America gets knocked down, we get back up,” Biden said.
President Biden stated in his speech that Americans pay more for prescription drugs than anywhere else. He discussed wanting to cap the insulin cost to $35 dollars and took a jab at "big pharma", stating that even at a lower cost that companies will still make a healthy profit.
President Joe Biden said Americans are "writing the greatest comeback story never told" four years after the Covid-19 pandemic and economic crisis. Biden also touted the passage of the infrastructure bill and the drops in unemployment and inflation.
President Biden reflects on the recent U.S. decisions on reproductive rights including the controversial IVF ruling in Alabama and the overturning of Roe v. Wade during his State of the Union speech.
President Joe Biden entered the House chamber in smiles and shook hands with members of Congress before delivering his State of the Union address. As Biden walked in, some Republicans can be heard shouting "Laken Reilly!" and some Democratic lawmakers heard saying, "Four more years!"
Rachel Maddow, Jen Psaki, Chris Hayes, Ari Melber, and Nicolle Wallace discuss how Mike Johnson’s ability to control the Republican caucus will be display tonight during Biden’s State of the Union address, how President Biden prepares for potential outbursts, and the public’s expectations given the historically unproductive nature of the 118th U.S. Congress. “[President Biden] is standing in a front of a Congress that literally can’t put a ‘y’ on the end of a weekday without being
Katie Porter didn't face a "rigged" election, but she's right to highlight the way that our political system more broadly is rigged to favor certain interests.
Rep. Ronny Jackson has continued to call himself a retired Navy admiral even though he was demoted in 2021 after a damning report about his inappropriate conduct as a White House physician.
John Brennen, former CIA Director, David Plouffe, former Obama Campaign Manager, and Charlie Sykes, MSNBC Contributor join Nicolle Wallace on Deadline White House with reaction to the news that the Biden Administration is preparing to give Donald Trump intel briefings, after he secures the GOP nomination this summer, in spite of the fact that the person receiving those briefings is currently under indictment for mishandling classified information.
A U.S. Senate showdown between Rep. Ruben Gallego, a Democrat, and Republican Kari Lake in Arizona is just what Biden needs prevail over Trump again.