Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) has said he is boycotting President Donald J. Trump’s address before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, citing “solidarity with our friends in Ukraine.”
The Virginia Democrat, 74, announced in a press release that “Since being elected to Congress, I have never missed a State of the Union address”—although President Trump’s planned address is not a State of the Union—but “we have never seen our democracy so tested… our laws, institutions, and the separation of powers so attacked from within.”
Alongside “solidarity” with Ukraine, Connolly cites solidarity with “federal workers and contractors,” “DC and Capitol Police officers,” and others as the reason he will refuse to hear the American people’s duly elected President.
Last week, President Trump clashed with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, who remains in office beyond his elected term due to marital law, in the Oval Office, after the Ukrainian started an argument with Vice President J.D. Vance over comments related to diplomacy with Russia.
President Trump subsequently announced he would be pausing U.S. aid to Ukraine, having determined that Zelensky will not make peace as long as the American taxpayer is underwriting his war effort. Shortly after this pause was announced, Zelensky appeared to buckle, saying he was “ready to work under President Trump’s strong leadership to get a peace that lasts.”
U.S. Congressman @GerryConnolly wants you to know that he won’t be attending U.S. President Donald Trump’s address to the U.S. Congress….
Because solidarity with Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/DU2fYndwSb
— Former Congressman Matt Gaetz (@FmrRepMattGaetz) March 4, 2025