The annual speech that the president gives to the congress is known as the State of the Union. The speech allows presidents to report the condition of the nation and to outline their legislative agenda and priorities.
The State of the Union address.
The annual speech given by the president to update Congress and the people is called the State of the Union address.
The president is required to give an annual State of the Union address to Congress, and presidents frequently use this speech as an opportunity to propose a legislative agenda for Congress.
The meeting is called a joint session of Congress. The speech made by the President is called his state of the union address. The Constitution requires that the President make such a report from time to time. It does not have to be an annual report and it does not have to be a speech. Past presidents have made written reports and sent them to Congress to read.
An inaugural speech is one given by the president. It is a speech that he uses to introduce himself and the plans for the country.
This annual announcement or speech is called "The state of the union address,"
country's response to president george w bush's 9/11 speech was we will go to war with them and we wil win
Inagural Address - this is the speech the President gives the country at the inauguration ceremony, right after he swears his oath and is declared "in office" and the President of the United States.
Senator Joseph McCarthy's attempts to limit free speech
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.
matter for annual day speech