How to watch Trump’s 2026 State of the Union, 9 p.m. ET
President Trump is scheduled to deliver his 2026 State of the Union address at 9 p.m. ET from the House Chamber. The prime-time slot is traditional and typically draws broad national carriage across major television and digital platforms.
For audio coverage, listeners can tune into SiriusXM, which is carrying the address across channels including Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, POTUS, Patriot, Progress and more, according to SiriusXM. Live video streams are expected to mirror network coverage across web and mobile apps, with pre- and post-speech analysis programming.
Regional outlets are flagging local viewing options and timing; Oregonians, for example, can watch as the president delivers his first State of the Union of his second term on Feb. 24, as reported by the Statesman Journal. That guide underscores the 9 p.m. ET start and points viewers to network and streaming access.
What to expect: DHS funding, tariffs ruling, foreign policy themes
Policy stakes are expected to feature prominently. An indefinite U.S. Department of Homeland Security funding shutdown, a recent Supreme Court ruling rejecting emergency tariffs, and potential foreign policy flashpoints have been identified as key backdrops for the address, as reported by Time. The tariff ruling could shape how the administration frames trade tools and executive authority, while DHS funding dynamics may drive the speech’s border and security emphasis.
Programming plans also suggest an unusually robust lead-in window, with national outlets preparing extended coverage well before 9 p.m. ET, as reported by Yahoo. That timing typically allows campaigns and congressional leaders to shape immediate reaction narratives.
The same reporting noted heightened political theater around the event, including reports of planned boycotts and counterprogramming. Those efforts, alongside official party responses, could influence early public perception of the address and its policy framing.
Abigail Spanberger Democratic response, boycotts, and polling snapshot
Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger is set to deliver the formal Democratic response, with aides signaling a focus on lowering everyday costs, defending personal freedoms, and strengthening healthcare protections, according to the Associated Press. Additional responses previewed on the Democratic side include a Spanish-language address and a progressive rebuttal, an approach often used to reach distinct voter cohorts without fracturing the party’s overall message. Taken together, the format points to a strategy of addressing swing voters while energizing base constituencies.
Those response plans unfold alongside reports of boycotts and outside counter-events referenced earlier, reflecting a broader opposition posture rather than a single-message rebuttal. The mix of official speeches and protest activity suggests parties are competing not just on policy substance but on audience and platform.
Ahead of the address, national polling has generally shown elevated skepticism about the president’s performance compared with approval. As reported by The Guardian: “Speech comes as midterms loom and opinion polls show more voters disapprove than approve of his performance.” That climate could shape how both the White House and opposition figures calibrate tone and emphasis.
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