Besides State of the Union addresses, inaugurals and counting of electoral votes, joint sessions or meetings usually fall into one of several topics.
Presidential addresses In addition to a State of the Union address, presidents address Congress on specific subjects. The first such speech was delivered by
John Adams on the subject of
U.S. relations with France. The most popular subjects for such addresses are
economic,
military and
foreign policy issues. In addition to bringing back the tradition of delivering a State of the Union address,
Woodrow Wilson was the first president since John Adams to address Congress on specific topics. He delivered 17 such speeches, more than any other president. Newly inaugurated presidents may deliver an address to a joint session of Congress, similar to a State of the Union, shortly after they enter office; however, this speech is not considered an official "State of the Union".
Foreign dignitaries and Speaker
Rayburn.
Sukarno addresses Congress in 1956. Sitting behind him Vice President
Nixon and Speaker Rayburn. He is the only Indonesian president to address a joint session of Congress. addresses Congress in 2015. Behind him are Vice President
Biden and Speaker
Boehner. Joint meetings have been held more than a hundred times to enable foreign
heads of state or
heads of government to address Congress. Leaders of 48 countries have addressed Congress at a joint meeting:
Israel leads the list with ten joint meetings addresses by heads of state or dignitaries. Other leading countries are:
France (9),
United Kingdom (9),
Mexico (7),
South Korea (7),
India (6),
Italy (6),
Ireland (6),
Germany, including West Germany and unified Germany (5),
Australia (4),
Canada (3),
Argentina (3),
Philippines (3),
Japan (3),
Spain (2),
Ukraine (2).
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu made four joint addresses to Congress, more than any other foreign dignitary (1996, 2011, 2015, 2024).
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill addressed joint meetings of Congress on three occasions (
1941,
1943,
1952).
Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi and
Prime Minister of Israel Yitzhak Rabin addressed joint meetings of Congress on two occasions (Modi: 2016, 2023; Rabin: 1976 and 1994) as did
Nelson Mandela of
South Africa (1990 and 1994). The first foreign dignitary to address a joint meeting of Congress was
David Kalakaua, King of the Hawaiian Islands, on December 18, 1874, followed by Ambassador
André de La Boulaye of France who addressed a joint session on May 20, 1934, to memorialize the centennial anniversary of the death of
Marquis de Lafayette. The first non-dignitary to address a joint meeting of Congress was
Polish Solidarity leader
Lech Wałęsa in 1989.
Nelson Mandela, then deputy president of the African National Congress addressed a joint meeting in 1990. Twice have joint meetings been attended by dignitaries from two countries: On September 18, 1978, when Congress was addressed by
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, and on July 26, 1994, when Congress was addressed by
King Hussein of Jordan and
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
John Howard,
Prime Minister of Australia, had originally been scheduled to address Congress on September 12, 2001, but his address was postponed due to the
September 11 terrorist attacks the previous day. Howard's address was rescheduled for June 12, 2002, where he spoke about the attacks he had witnessed 9 months earlier. Howard was acknowledged with a standing ovation and describes the occasion as a "moving moment." The most recent addresses by foreign dignitaries were given by
King of the United Kingdom Charles III, on April 28, 2026,
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu, on July 24, 2024,
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, on April 11, 2024. All foreign heads of state and heads of government are presented officially to Congress in the same manner as the president during the
State of the Union Address and are introduced by the speaker by
their diplomatic style of address, followed by their name and respective office.
Military leaders Joint meetings are sometimes called to hear addresses by
generals,
admirals, or other military leaders. Perhaps the most notable example is
Douglas MacArthur's 1951
farewell address to Congress. In concluding the speech he recalled an old army song which contained the line "old soldiers never die; they just fade away". He then said, "And like the old soldier of that ballad, I now close my military career and just fade away, an old soldier who tried to do his duty as God gave him the light to see that duty. Good-bye".
Astronauts Six times in the first years of the
Space Age, Congress jointly met to be addressed by
astronauts after their trips in space.
Memorials Nine times, Congress has jointly met to hold a memorial service for a deceased president or former president. Congress has also met to memorialize Vice President
James Sherman and the
Marquis de Lafayette, and twice outside of Washington, once in
Independence Hall in Philadelphia on July 16, 1987, the bicentennial of the
Connecticut Compromise during the
Constitutional Convention that determined the structure of Congress, and once in
Federal Hall in New York City on September 6, 2002 to memorialize the victims of the September 11 attacks in advance of their first anniversary. ==Historic joint sessions and joint meetings==