Clocking in at 1 hour and 47 minutes, Trump’s 2026 State of the Union officially became the longest in modern U.S. history, smashing the previous record set by former President Bill Clinton in 2000. Clinton’s address lasted just over 1 hour and 28 minutes, a benchmark that stood for more than two decades. Trump didn’t just edge past it. He blew by it.
For comparison, the shortest State of the Union in recent history came from President Richard Nixon in 1972, wrapping up in just 28 minutes. Trump’s speech ran nearly four times that length — a political marathon that underscored just how much ground he intended to cover heading into a critical midterm cycle.
Technically, Trump had already delivered a longer speech last year — a 1 hour and 39 minute address to a joint session of Congress — but that did not qualify as a formal State of the Union. This one did. And it now holds the record.
The president had teased the length in advance.
“I’m going to be making a speech tomorrow night, and it’s going to be a long one because we have so much to talk about,” Trump said Monday.
He wasn’t exaggerating.
With the 2026 midterms looming, the address is widely viewed as one of Trump’s biggest opportunities to frame the national conversation. He used it to spotlight what he described as major first-year victories: sweeping tax cuts, the rollout of Trump accounts, intensified border security operations, and even the reported capture of Venezuelan strongman Nicolas Maduro.
The speech was vintage Trump — combative, unapologetic, and relentless.
BREAKING — IT’S OFFICIAL: President Trump now holds the record for the longest State of the Union in American history, previously held by Bill Clinton
Let’s go! Trump was ALWAYS going to make it happen! pic.twitter.com/RLMSVeXdIh
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) February 25, 2026
Should presidents aim for longer State of the Union speeches?
He took repeated swings at Democrats, accusing them of hypocrisy on affordability, an issue that continues to rank at the top of voter concerns.
“The same people in this chamber who voted for those disasters suddenly use the word ‘affordability,’” Trump said. “Somebody gave it to them. You caused that problem … we are doing really well. Those prices are plummeting downward.”
Affordability wasn’t just a passing mention. It was a central theme. With inflation fatigue still lingering among voters, Trump framed his economic agenda as a direct counterpunch to what he described as years of reckless spending and failed policies.
He also laid out an aggressive forward-looking agenda. Trump urged Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require proof of citizenship to vote. He called for legislation banning congressional stock trading and pushed for a larger military budget. Each proposal drew sharp reactions across the chamber.
In one of the more striking moments of the night, Trump even took aim at the Supreme Court, criticizing its recent decision to strike down his International Emergency Economic Powers Act tariffs.
The optics were equally powerful. The president received applause from Republican lawmakers throughout the speech and concluded the night by shaking hands with Vice President JD Vance on the House floor — a symbolic image as the administration barrels toward the midterms.
Love him or loathe him, one thing is clear: Trump knows how to command a stage. And on Tuesday night, he commanded it longer than any president before him.
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BREAKING — IT’S OFFICIAL: President Trump now holds the record for the longest State of the Union in American history, previously held by Bill Clinton
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