Politics & Government

What Time Is the State of the Union Address?

Will you be watching?

President Obama's State of the Union address Tuesday night will offer local citizens more chances than ever to participate and find out more about issues they're most interested in. The White House will offer an "enhanced" viewing experience complete with charts, graphs and data.

The address will begin at 6 p.m. PT and will be followed by the Republican response, this year delivered by U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida.

CNN will begin its coverage at 4 p.m. with political anchors and analysts including former Speaker Newt Gingrich who ran an unsuccessful campaign in the Republican presidential primary.

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C-SPAN coverage will begin with a live preview, one hour early, at 5 p.m., and will include interviews with members of Congress and others from the Capitol's Statuary Hall at 10 p.m., immediately following the president's address and Republican response.

Patch readers have mixed feelings about watching the annual address.

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"I like to keep my finger on the pulse of what's going on," Kellie Fuller wrote on the Napa Valley Patch Facebook page

Fellow Napa Valley Patch reader Tiffany Robertson Holloran said she wouldn't be tuning in.

"Don't need to hear our president reprimand and lecture the republicans and give another campaign speech for an hour plus," she wrote on Facebook.

Rohnert Park-Cotati Patch reader Marcie Rand Galick said, "Heavens NO. Westminster is on."

Democrats in Sonoma Valley will be hosting a SOTU Watch Party at Round Table Pizza starting at 5:30 p.m.

Check back to Patch tonight for coverage of the State of the Union and its impacts locally!

NBC will begin its coverage online at 5:45 p.m. at www.nbcnews.com, and will go live on the air at 6 p.m. CBS also will air the speech live at 6 p.m.

As President Obama enters the U.S. House of Representatives he will be announced by the House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving. Obama will be preceded by members of his Cabinet and the Supreme Court justices. Tradition dictates that one member of the Cabinet stays behind.

Lawmakers from California will observe some time-honored traditions at tonight's address at the Capitol by inviting guests and making special seating arrangements during the address.

Democrat Senator Dianne Feinstein invited a California victim of gun violence to attend Tuesday’s State of the Union address. Feinstein, author of the Senate bill that would ban assault weapons and high capacity magazines, invited Josh Stepakoff. Josh was 6 when he was shot at the North Valley Jewish Community Center shooting in Granada Hills in 1999.

“Josh is a remarkable young man whose life was forever changed by a senseless act of mass gun violence," Feinstein said in a prepared statement. “Since his tragic experience, Josh has become a voice for young victims across the country. It is important for members of Congress to see the faces behind these tragedies of gun violence.”

Formerly known as the “Annual Message,” the State of the Union Address has a rich history. Presidents Washington and Adams delivered live addresses to Congress, but in 1801 President Thomas Jefferson chose to submit his address in writing. That tradition held until President Woodrow Wilson resumed the practice of live addresses in 1913.

In addition to Members of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate, attendees will include the President’s Cabinet, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Chief Justice and Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, and the U.S. Diplomatic Corps.


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