? Eh, he said in the article the content of the speech was what he did not approve of as well.
Read: “The State of the Union address promised more money than I can possibly imagine,†Smith said in his opening statement that was focused on defense spending,
What difference does it make if verbal or written if the content is forced to be changed by a member of Congress?
He has no business changing what the Executive says or writes that the Constitution clearly indicates is an Executive function.
I do not understand what you are getting at.
I'm saying that
if his objection was
just to delivering an SOTU speech at a podium verbally, I could hold with that. I'm well on record here and elsewhere as saying we ought to go back to the way it was done by most presidents prior to Woodrow Wilson. Just write the damn thing, send it to Congress, and have them insert it into the
Congressional Record, and screw the Big Event every year.
The Congressman in question, or anyone, really, can rant his or their heads off to his or their heart's content about any content in the speech. Of course they can't change it but there's no law saying anyone must agree whole-hogger with anything said. Show me a SOTU and I'll show you
someone who thinks a president is talking through his
chapeau.
But it would be delicious to think of what might happen if the current or succeeding president decides to revert to the pre-Wilson practise of just writing and sending the message to Congress without going to Capitol Hill to give it as a speech and without bothering about the attendant pomp, circumstance, windbaggery, and glad-handing b.s. (I think it was Thomas Jefferson who began the old tradition of merely delivering the SOTU in writing to Congress, without giving it as a speech.) The Constitution's language about the president giving information on the state of the union "from time to time" doesn't exactly bind a president to doing it every year. Also, Herbert Hoover was the last president to submit an SOTU each year of his term in writing without delivering the speech verbally. (Calvin Coolidge gave it as a speech once after he succeeded Warren Harding, but delivered it in writing without a speech at the end of the term he finished for Harding and then all four years of the full term to which he was elected.)