Since Teddy Roosevelt, American presidents have regularly given commencement addresses at this time of year.
They have used these speeches to college graduates to explain their approach to foreign policy, poke fun at themselves, offer deeply personal reflections or just share their advice on life.
But setting aside the substance of the speeches, the locations themselves are telling — and that is especially true for President Donald Trump.
Over the years, presidents have made a statement by speaking at their own alma maters, notable universities in battleground states, faith-based institutions, historically Black colleges, women’s colleges, trade schools and even community colleges, plus giving regular graduation addresses at the nation’s military service academies.
Earlier this month, Trump spoke at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy for the second time since his first term. Last year, he spoke at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, another repeat. In his first term, he also spoke at the Naval Academy and the Air Force Academy.
But the only nonmilitary colleges at which Trump has given commencement addresses in both of his terms were the private, evangelical Liberty University in 2017 and the University of Alabama in 2025, both just months after taking office.
That is a striking break from his predecessors, and there are four major reasons for it.
Read Ryan Teague Beckwith’s analysis here.