congressanale
On the steps of the Capitol Building like every president is supposed to.
President of which country or nation? or do you mean the most famous president out of every country in the world?
No, every African country has its own leader/president.
Giving a State of the Union speech (more commonly called an 'address') is not optional. The president is expected to do it. In fact, the Constitution says a president must do it. Although the Constitution does not spell out when or even how (it can be written and sent over, or delivered in person as a speech to congress), it does say a president must provide the congress with a report, informing them of how the country is progressing under his leadership. So, this has become an annual event for every president. Some presidents have decided to deliver it as a formal speech, while others just sent it as a written report. In the past 70 years or so, delivering it in person as a formal speech (or address) has become the custom-- which is how George Washington did it at the very beginning of our country.
Thomas Jefferson in his Inaugural Speech
anything? no president! good question, but a country helps another, but not every need they have. it's too expensive for the country helping!
The president is a title reserved for the leader of the country. The title of leaders of the state is governor.
In some years it is- he gives one at the beginning of every year. In some years some crisis arises that prompts a speech and that speech may be the most important one he gives. Presidents also make a speech at their inauguration and some of these inaugural addresses are the highlight of a president's speech-making.
There is no set person. The Constitution requires that the President shall inform the Congress of the "state of the Union". It doesn't have to be a speech, and it doesn't have to be every year. The habit of the formal "state of the union" speech has come from television! About 20 years ago, the opposition party in Congress noted that the President always got prime time for the SOTU speech, and demanded "equal time". This was seen as fair since the President's speech was more political than functional. Since then, a member of the opposition party has been traditionally given some time to make its point in response to the SOTU speech. Too frequently, the President has used the SOTU as just another campaign speech rather than really reporting to Congress on the current state of the country.
State of the Union address, before a joint session of the United States Congress.
Mexico!