In a pair of tweets late Wednesday night, President Trump said that he would not give the State of the Union address until after the government shutdown ends, and that he is not "looking for an alternative venue."
The backdrop: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent Trump a letter Wednesday stating that the House "will not consider a resolution authorizing the President's State of the Union in the House Chamber until the government has opened." Trump said earlier at the White House that he would come up with another plan, but is now opting to wait to give the address until the shutdown over funding for his border wall — now 33 days old — is over.
Pelosi later responded to Trump's statement with a tweet of her own:
What's next: The Senate is expected to vote on dueling proposals to reopen the government on Thursday: one with $5.7 billion for a border wall, and one without. Neither is expected to pass.