Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger will deliver the Democratic response to Donald Trump’s State of the Union address live from Williamsburg, Virginia.
Spanberger, who previously served in Congress for six years, became the first woman elected governor of the Southern state, flipping control of the office from Republican to Democrat in November.
A mother of three school-aged daughters, Spanberger was also a former CIA case officer who worked undercover to prevent terrorist attacks and track cartels.
Her speech is expected to focus on affordability, including the high costs of housing, healthcare, energy, and groceries. She is also expected to address how Trump’s policies have created global uncertainty and to highlight what ordinary citizens can do to push back and get involved heading into November’s midterm elections.
“We are at a defining moment in our nation’s history,” Spanberger said in a statement ahead of her address. “Virginians and Americans across the country are contending with rising costs, chaos in their communities, and a real fear of what each day might bring.”
Delivering a party’s response to the president’s State of the Union address is widely viewed as a prestigious assignment and who the party chooses often signals who it sees as an emerging leader.
However, in recent years, the person tasked with giving the rebuttal has been plagued by an alleged “curse.”
In 2009, then-Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a rising star in the Republican Party, delivered his rebuttal to former President Barack Obama’s first State of the Union address. His awkward introduction, which was compared to Kenneth the Page’s character from “30 Rock,” dogged him, and his 2016 presidential run ended in a thud. Former Rep. Michele Bachmann’s off-camera stare made her the joke of late-night comedians, as did then-Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio’s dry mouth and near-constant water-sipping. Republican Sen. Katie Britt of Alabama’s kitchen-table monologue did her no favors, either.