Democrat Al Green held up the sign as Donald Trump walked into the House of Representatives to deliver the annual speech – and his was not the only protest
Donald Trump was confronted by a sign reading “black people aren’t apes” as he gave his State of the Union speech tonight.
Democrat House member Al Green held up the sign as Donald Trump walked into the House of Representatives chamber for the annual address to a joint session of congress tonight. Rep. Green was removed from Trump’s joint address to Congress last year, after he yelled at the President in protest over cuts to Medicaid.
This year’s protest refers to a video Trump posted to his Truth Social website earlier this month, which depicted Barack and Michelle Obama as apes. Trump claimed he had not watched the video all the way through before instructing an aide to post it on his behalf.
Some Democratic congresswomen arrived at the speech wearing ‘suffragist’ white in support of women’s rights.
Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández of New Mexico, who leads Democratic Women’s Caucus, told CBS News: “This year, there are specific attacks on women’s ability to vote. The Democratic Women’s Caucus is wearing white both to honor that fight that women have always had and to signal we are still in the fight.” Some members of Congress are swerving tonight’s speech, after Democrat leaders urged them to stay away rather than disrupt the speech with a headline-grabbing stunt.
Trump is going into the State of the Union with worse poll ratings than any president in modern history. This week a Washington Post/ABC News poll found 60% of Americans said they disapproved of the job Trump is doing – with 47% indicating strong approval. Just 39% said they approved of his performance, the lowest of any President ahead of a second-year State of the Union in modern history.
The last time Trump’s disapproval reached 60% was shortly after the January 6th Insurrection in the final days of his first term.
Few Americans, 29%, think the country is heading in the right direction, according to the most recent AP-NORC poll. Most, 69%, believe things are heading in the wrong direction. That pessimism is higher than it was when Trump took office last year. Last March, about 6 in 10 Americans said the country was heading in the wrong direction.
That’s partially because Republicans’ mood grew much darker last fall, after the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Republicans are now more optimistic than they were a few months ago, but only about 6 in 10 say the country is heading in the right direction, down from about 7 in 10 last March.
