WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's State of the Union address is expected to tilt heavily on domestic issues, but it's also a chance for the Republican to make the case for his foreign policy efforts to Americans who are increasingly demonstrating uneasiness about his priorities.
The president counts brokering a fragile ceasefire deal in Gaza, capturing autocratic leader Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela and pressing fellow NATO members to increase defense spending among his biggest wins.
At a moment when polls show the American public increasingly concerned about the economy, Trump's assignment Tuesday evening also is to cut through thickening skepticism that he's staying true to his ''America First'' philosophy after a year in which his focus was often far from home. It's a wariness shared by some who once counted themselves among Trump's closest allies.
''If you had put America FIRST from the start, instead of your rich donor class and foreign policy, you wouldn't have to strategize on how to gaslight Americans,'' former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican who resigned from Congress last month after a bitter split with Trump, grumbled on X as the White House prepared its messaging blitz around the address.
Sixty-one percent of U.S. adults said they disapprove of how Trump is handling foreign policy, while 56% say Trump has ''gone too far'' in using the U.S. military to intervene in other countries, according to surveys from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted earlier this month and in January.
Here are a few things to look out for in Trump's major address:
Will he take action against Iran?
The growing unease comes as Trump weighs whether to carry out new military action on Iran. He last week warned Iran that ''bad things will happen'' soon if a deal is not reached over its nuclear program.