In a characteristically unconventional address to Republican lawmakers at the recently renamed Trump-Kennedy Center in Washington, President Donald Trump marked the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro while simultaneously kicking off his 2026 midterm election campaign. The speech combined foreign policy commentary with domestic political theater as Trump referenced Maduro’s alleged imitation of his dance moves alongside more serious allegations of human rights abuses.
Trump asserted that Maduro’s public dancing to a techno remix of his ‘No War, Yes Peace’ mantra during U.S. military deployments to the Caribbean in late 2025 influenced White House decision-making. ‘He gets up there and tries to imitate my dance a little bit,’ Trump remarked, before transitioning to grave accusations. ‘But he’s a violent guy who’s killed millions. They maintain a torture chamber in central Caracas that they’re now dismantling.’
The President celebrated what he termed a ‘brilliant’ special forces operation that resulted in Maduro’s capture last Saturday, though he provided no additional details about alleged Venezuelan torture facilities or elaborated on his previously vague intentions for U.S. management of Venezuela’s oil resources.
Much of the address focused on domestic politics, with Trump performing an exaggerated imitation of a transgender weightlifter while discussing his administration’s sports policy. ‘My wife hates when I do this,’ he acknowledged. ‘She says it’s so unpresidential.’ Trump further revealed that his spouse disapproves of his dancing, rhetorically asking attendees to imagine Franklin D. Roosevelt engaging in similar behavior—a pointed reference to the polio-stricken president’s physical limitations.
The speech coincided with the fifth anniversary of the U.S. Capitol attack, with Trump repeating his unsubstantiated claims about the 2020 election being ‘rigged.’ He warned Republican lawmakers that failure to win the upcoming midterms could result in another impeachment effort, noting that he had pardoned nearly 1,600 January 6 rioters upon returning to office in January 2025.
Despite Trump’s assertions of economic success, polls indicate persistent voter concerns about affordability and living costs. The President expressed frustration with public perception, telling fellow Republicans: ‘I wish you could explain what’s happening with the public mindset. We have the right policies.’
