Trump wants to deliver State of Union next week as planned


WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House is proceeding with plans for President Donald Trump to deliver his State of the Union speech in front of a joint session of Congress on Tuesday without knowing whether Democrats will let him have that stage.

"At this point, we're moving forward," said Trump spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders, even as officials continued to work on a backup plan to have the president speak somewhere else.

"Nancy Pelosi made the invitation to the president on the State of the Union," Sanders said, referring to an invitation extended by the House speaker before she pulled away the welcome mat in a letter last week. "He accepted."

The White House emailed the House sergeant-at-arms asking to schedule a walk-through in anticipation of the speech, according to a White House official who was not authorized to discuss the planning publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The move is the latest in a game of brinkmanship between Trump and the House speaker as they remain locked in an increasingly personal standoff over Trump's demand for border wall money that has forced a partial government shutdown that is now in its second month.

The maneuvering began last week when Pelosi sent a letter to Trump suggesting he either deliver the speech in writing or postpone it until after the partial government shutdown is resolved, citing security concerns. But she stopped short of denying him the forum. Now the White House, in essence, is calling her bluff.

"She has not canceled it," White House spokesman Hogan Gidley told Fox News. "She asked us to postpone it."

He added: "Nancy Pelosi does not dictate to the president when he will or will not have a conversation with the American people."

She does have a say, though, on where he has that conversation.

The president cannot speak in front of a joint session of Congress without both chambers' explicit permission. A resolution needs to be approved by both chambers specifying the date and time for receiving an address from the president. State of the Union speeches routinely are delivered in the House chamber.

The Republican leader in the House, Kevin McCarthy, said the address should be "in the House chamber as we have always done. This is not the time to play politics."

But Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York said: "Unless the government is reopened, it's highly unlikely the State of the Union is going to take place on the floor of the United States House of Representatives."