U.S. President Donald Trump delivered an address to the nation on December 17, 2025, from the White House, highlighting progress in migration, economy, and security during his first year in office. He announced bonuses for the military and promised further tax cuts and inflation reductions. While speculation swirled around topics like the USMCA and Venezuela, the speech focused on domestic achievements.
Donald Trump began his address at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time (8:00 p.m. Mexico time) on December 17, 2025, stating that a year ago the United States faced a crisis under the previous administration. 'Eleven months ago, the U.S. was a disaster,' he said, criticizing the 'invasion' of migrants and inherited inflation from Joe Biden.
On migration, Trump claimed he contained irregular flows from day one, achieving 'the strongest border in the world.' 'No single illegal has entered in the last seven months,' he asserted, describing a 'reverse migration' that creates more jobs for Americans. He blamed the prior crisis on Biden, who 'never issued presidential decrees against migration.'
Economically, the president celebrated his tariffs as 'my favorite word,' which boosted private investment and created record private-sector jobs. 'Wages are growing faster than inflation,' he said, highlighting that Thanksgiving dinner cost 30 percent less than last year. He promised to combat inflation in housing and food prices, and confront pharmaceutical companies to lower prices by up to 600 percent.
On security, Trump claimed to have resolved eight wars in 10 months, including Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages, and 'decimated' cartels with a 94 percent reduction in drug trafficking. He announced that 1.45 million military personnel will receive a 'warrior dividend' of 1,756 dollars for Christmas, and plans health reforms so people can buy their own insurance.
Although expectations included discussion of the USMCA review or tensions with Venezuela—where he ordered a blockade of oil tankers on December 16—Trump focused on a positive balance. 'The best is yet to come,' he concluded, wishing a Merry Christmas and prosperous New Year. The message built anticipation, but Tucker Carlson had erroneously speculated about a war declaration against Venezuela.