Why It Wasn’t a ‘State of the Union’ Address

The first address by the president to a joint session of Congress is called just that: an ‘address’

Julio Vincent Gambuto
GEN
Published in
3 min readApr 29, 2021

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Quick civics lesson. I just learned this myself and thought I would share it with you. You may be wondering why President Biden’s first major address to a joint session of Congress was not called the “State of the Union.” Isn’t that what we call the annual address? The red team sits on one side, the blue team on the other, and they applaud and scowl at alternating moments throughout the evening. It’s a stodgy football game — tennis match? I don’t know; I’m not a sports guy — of politics, policy, and pride.

The event has its own initialism: SOTU — like POTUS, SCOTUS, and SHOTUS (Second Husband of the United States, a.k.a. “Doug”). Actually, I think he’s officially called the Second Gentleman. I seem to be the only one following Doug on Medium. Hmmm, maybe that’s not him. Is Doug on Twitter? Yes, he is. Follow Doug here. Doug was there, too, last night, which was equally groundbreaking. He sat at least six feet away from Dr. Jill Biden, community college professor and muse for Biden’s education plan. Both were masked and modestly clapping.

Anyway, when things are really tense, like they were in 2020, the Speaker rips up the speech behind the back of the…

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Julio Vincent Gambuto
GEN
Writer for

Author + Moviemaker. Happy November. Back to socials 2x/week. Connect at juliovincent.com.