What to Expect From President Obama's Final State of the Union Address

“It’s not going to be a laundry list of things," said one scholar.

In fact, he probably wouldn’t care if they didn't show up at all.

Experts predict that rather than trying to cajole a Republican-controlled Congress to cooperate with him in 2016, the president will be asking viewers around the country to remember his legacy items and consider the future in an attempt to set the tone for the next (he hopes, Democratic) president.

That’s how the president himself framed it in a video message sent to supporters Wednesday.

“What I want to focus on in this State of the Union address [is] not just the remarkable progress we’ve made, not just what I want to get done in the year ahead, but what we all need to do together in the years to come,” he said.

That’s all the more reason why Obama's State of the Union is more of a breakup note with Congress than anything else: showing members that he’s already over them and is looking toward the impact his solo work will have on the country’s future.

“There’s no point in wasting time trying to convince this Congress to embrace really any aspects of his agenda,” said congressional scholar Thomas Mann.

The president is also likely to take advantage of his captive national prime-time audience to highlight what he considers his biggest accomplishments of the past seven years.

“I would think there’s a very good chance he’ll talk about what shape the economy was in when he got elected and inaugurated and what’s happened since and where we have to go,” Ornstein said.

“He’ll pretty much ignore Congress in terms of appealing for support, but use the Republican majorities as a way to link them with the Republican candidates for the White House and talk about just how extremely conservative the party has become,” Mann said.

That’s not to say the president is giving up entirely on passing bills in 2016: there could certainly be movement on less sweeping issues like criminal justice reform, mental health legislation and the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement.

But ironically, even as the White House faces a year of small-ball legislation ahead, officials are framing it as a conscious decision to focus on the bigger picture, well after Obama leaves office, as White House Chief of Staff Dennis McDonough did in an email to supporters accompanying the president’s video message.

“What we have left to do is bigger than any one policy initiative or new bill in Congress. This is about who we are, where we're headed, and what kind of country we want to be,” he said.