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Trump suggests ‘methods’ exist for bid for unconstitutional third term

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May 29, 2001
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President Donald Trump on Sunday declined to rule out seeking a third presidential term — an unconstitutional act explicitly barred under the 22nd Amendment — saying that “there are methods which you could do it.”

In a phone interview with NBC News’s Kristen Welker, Trump suggested that multiple plans have begun to circulate for him to run for a third term. He pointed to unspecified polling as an indicator of his popularity and claimed he had the “highest poll numbers of any Republican for the last 100 years.”

“A lot of people want me to do it,” Trump said. “But we have — my thinking is, we have a long way to go. I’m focused on the current.”
Asked whether any third-term plans have been presented to him, Trump said: “There are methods which you could do it, as you know.” Welker then mentioned a hypothetical plan where Vice President JD Vance would run in 2028 and “pass the baton.”
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“Well, that’s one. But there are others, too,” Trump responded.
“I’m not joking,” Trump said. “But, I’m not — it is far too early to think about it.”
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Pressed again by Welker on the toll of the presidency and if he would want to serve a third term, Trump, who would be 82 years old in 2028, said, “Well, I like working.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung reiterated that it was “far too early” to consider the possibility and emphasized the support Trump garnered in the election.
Trump, as a candidate and as a second-term president, frequently teased running for a third term and mused with supporters whether he should run again. The concept has gained traction with some of his most ardent allies — despite the Constitution’s 22nd Amendment, which flatly and explicitly limits presidents to being elected to two terms.
The 22nd Amendment was led by Republicans and passed in 1951 in response to the four-term presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. An amendment can be proposed with two-thirds of votes in the House and Senate or by two-thirds of state legislatures proposing a constitutional convention. Three-quarters of state legislatures or conventions in three-fourths of the states must ratify the amendment to change the Constitution.
Some allies have taken such comments seriously, including podcast host and former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon. In December, Bannon suggested that Trump should run again, asking a crowd at a New York dinner, “Are you ready for Trump ’28?” and raising the idea that a constitutional loophole could allow Trump to run for a third term.
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Less than a week into Trump’s second term, Rep. Andrew Ogles (R-Tennessee) also proposed an amendment to the Constitution that would allow Trump to serve a third term to “sustain the bold leadership our nation so desperately needs.”

 
Absolutely!! The founders specifically never made a rule you had to step down!!

Washington was misguided in a weak moment. He was so strong, much like Trump….then got weak and stepped down. Regretted it the rest of his life! Trump should be allowed to serve out his life!
 
There is a path for him to return to the Oval Office, but he can not get re-elected. It's a bit convoluted, but it is possible. The Constitutions says he can't be elected more than twice and that he can't serve more than a total of 10 years. So, he would have to finish out his term, have whoever is VP for a subsequent term step down after serving more than two years, have the President name Trump as his new VP, then that person would have to leave office and voila, Trump is in again. This is wildly impractical because no one is going to go along with it.
A Constitutional Amendment allowing someone to be elected to a third term isn't going to happen. Even among hard core Trump supporters, it isn't a popular idea. And anyone falling for this obvious trolling deserves to be trolled.
 
President Donald Trump on Sunday declined to rule out seeking a third presidential term — an unconstitutional act explicitly barred under the 22nd Amendment — saying that “there are methods which you could do it.”

In a phone interview with NBC News’s Kristen Welker, Trump suggested that multiple plans have begun to circulate for him to run for a third term. He pointed to unspecified polling as an indicator of his popularity and claimed he had the “highest poll numbers of any Republican for the last 100 years.”

“A lot of people want me to do it,” Trump said. “But we have — my thinking is, we have a long way to go. I’m focused on the current.”
Asked whether any third-term plans have been presented to him, Trump said: “There are methods which you could do it, as you know.” Welker then mentioned a hypothetical plan where Vice President JD Vance would run in 2028 and “pass the baton.”
trump-tracker-180px.png

Follow Trump’s first 100 Days
“Well, that’s one. But there are others, too,” Trump responded.
“I’m not joking,” Trump said. “But, I’m not — it is far too early to think about it.”
Advertisement



Pressed again by Welker on the toll of the presidency and if he would want to serve a third term, Trump, who would be 82 years old in 2028, said, “Well, I like working.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung reiterated that it was “far too early” to consider the possibility and emphasized the support Trump garnered in the election.
Trump, as a candidate and as a second-term president, frequently teased running for a third term and mused with supporters whether he should run again. The concept has gained traction with some of his most ardent allies — despite the Constitution’s 22nd Amendment, which flatly and explicitly limits presidents to being elected to two terms.
The 22nd Amendment was led by Republicans and passed in 1951 in response to the four-term presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. An amendment can be proposed with two-thirds of votes in the House and Senate or by two-thirds of state legislatures proposing a constitutional convention. Three-quarters of state legislatures or conventions in three-fourths of the states must ratify the amendment to change the Constitution.
Some allies have taken such comments seriously, including podcast host and former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon. In December, Bannon suggested that Trump should run again, asking a crowd at a New York dinner, “Are you ready for Trump ’28?” and raising the idea that a constitutional loophole could allow Trump to run for a third term.
Advertisement


Less than a week into Trump’s second term, Rep. Andrew Ogles (R-Tennessee) also proposed an amendment to the Constitution that would allow Trump to serve a third term to “sustain the bold leadership our nation so desperately needs.”

It’s called an amendment to the constitution. Which ain’t gonna happen.
 
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President Donald Trump on Sunday declined to rule out seeking a third presidential term — an unconstitutional act explicitly barred under the 22nd Amendment — saying that “there are methods which you could do it.”

In a phone interview with NBC News’s Kristen Welker, Trump suggested that multiple plans have begun to circulate for him to run for a third term. He pointed to unspecified polling as an indicator of his popularity and claimed he had the “highest poll numbers of any Republican for the last 100 years.”

“A lot of people want me to do it,” Trump said. “But we have — my thinking is, we have a long way to go. I’m focused on the current.”
Asked whether any third-term plans have been presented to him, Trump said: “There are methods which you could do it, as you know.” Welker then mentioned a hypothetical plan where Vice President JD Vance would run in 2028 and “pass the baton.”
trump-tracker-180px.png

Follow Trump’s first 100 Days
“Well, that’s one. But there are others, too,” Trump responded.
“I’m not joking,” Trump said. “But, I’m not — it is far too early to think about it.”
Advertisement



Pressed again by Welker on the toll of the presidency and if he would want to serve a third term, Trump, who would be 82 years old in 2028, said, “Well, I like working.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung reiterated that it was “far too early” to consider the possibility and emphasized the support Trump garnered in the election.
Trump, as a candidate and as a second-term president, frequently teased running for a third term and mused with supporters whether he should run again. The concept has gained traction with some of his most ardent allies — despite the Constitution’s 22nd Amendment, which flatly and explicitly limits presidents to being elected to two terms.
The 22nd Amendment was led by Republicans and passed in 1951 in response to the four-term presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. An amendment can be proposed with two-thirds of votes in the House and Senate or by two-thirds of state legislatures proposing a constitutional convention. Three-quarters of state legislatures or conventions in three-fourths of the states must ratify the amendment to change the Constitution.
Some allies have taken such comments seriously, including podcast host and former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon. In December, Bannon suggested that Trump should run again, asking a crowd at a New York dinner, “Are you ready for Trump ’28?” and raising the idea that a constitutional loophole could allow Trump to run for a third term.
Advertisement


Less than a week into Trump’s second term, Rep. Andrew Ogles (R-Tennessee) also proposed an amendment to the Constitution that would allow Trump to serve a third term to “sustain the bold leadership our nation so desperately needs.”

He’s a fascist.
 
There is a path for him to return to the Oval Office, but he can not get re-elected. It's a bit convoluted, but it is possible. The Constitutions says he can't be elected more than twice and that he can't serve more than a total of 10 years. So, he would have to finish out his term, have whoever is VP for a subsequent term step down after serving more than two years, have the President name Trump as his new VP, then that person would have to leave office and voila, Trump is in again. This is wildly impractical because no one is going to go along with it.
A Constitutional Amendment allowing someone to be elected to a third term isn't going to happen. Even among hard core Trump supporters, it isn't a popular idea. And anyone falling for this obvious trolling deserves to be trolled.
Just what we need. A POTUS who trolls half his country….🧌
 
Absolutely!! The founders specifically never made a rule you had to step down!!

Washington was misguided in a weak moment. He was so strong, much like Trump….then got weak and stepped down. Regretted it the rest of his life! Trump should be allowed to serve out his life!
WTF!!! It doesnt matter what the founders wrote or said since the 22nd amendment was written, passed and ratified and is law. Their way of doing it would be to say "come take me out of the white house", which is the kind of little baby shitass trump is
 
I mean I think it’s far fetched too but I’m curious what you would be saying if this was November, 2027 before Republican primaries instead of March, 2025. It’s not that far off.
If he was on the ballot without a constitutional amendment I’d say I was wrong. I’d probably move back to Germany as well 😆
 
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Seriously, if he runs again whoever the Democratic candidate is needs to not acknowledge his candidacy and make it very clear that on January 20 he will be at the inauguration ready to be the next President. Because if they allow this, then the Constitution is over as a governing document. Honestly, I don't see any way him running for a 3rd term ends in anything but a civil war because there will be states that will not acknowledge it and will try to secede. Unless the Democrats just shrug their shoulders and go "Oh well, gosh darnit he did it again". Which is also entirely possible.
 
Imagine the campaign promises for a Trump run in 28.

I will end the war with Greenland in 24 hours.

I will restore Medicaid payments.

The tariffs will really kick in and I will get the Dow back to 25,000

I will reclaim Montana,Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan from those evil bastards in Canada.
 
There is a path for him to return to the Oval Office, but he can not get re-elected. It's a bit convoluted, but it is possible. The Constitutions says he can't be elected more than twice and that he can't serve more than a total of 10 years. So, he would have to finish out his term, have whoever is VP for a subsequent term step down after serving more than two years, have the President name Trump as his new VP, then that person would have to leave office and voila, Trump is in again. This is wildly impractical because no one is going to go along with it.
A Constitutional Amendment allowing someone to be elected to a third term isn't going to happen. Even among hard core Trump supporters, it isn't a popular idea. And anyone falling for this obvious trolling deserves to be trolled.

Incorrect. No one disqualified for being POTUS can serve as VP. Trump being elected twice disqualified him as serving as VP.
 
There is a path for him to return to the Oval Office, but he can not get re-elected. It's a bit convoluted, but it is possible. The Constitutions says he can't be elected more than twice and that he can't serve more than a total of 10 years. So, he would have to finish out his term, have whoever is VP for a subsequent term step down after serving more than two years, have the President name Trump as his new VP, then that person would have to leave office and voila, Trump is in again. This is wildly impractical because no one is going to go along with it.
A Constitutional Amendment allowing someone to be elected to a third term isn't going to happen. Even among hard core Trump supporters, it isn't a popular idea. And anyone falling for this obvious trolling deserves to be trolled.
Wrong.
 
Incorrect. No one disqualified for being POTUS can serve as VP. Trump being elected twice disqualified him as serving as VP.
Not the way I understand it. He could be named a replacement VP provided the sitting President has less than two years left. The rules are no one can be elected more than twice and serve no more than 10 total years. In that situation, he only would have 8 years served and wouldn't surpass it.
Since a person can still be elected twice even if they have already served as President provided they served less than two years as a replacement, the same should be true in reverse order.
 
Not the way I understand it. He could be named a replacement VP provided the sitting President has less than two years left. The rules are no one can be elected more than twice and serve no more than 10 total years. In that situation, he only would have 8 years served and wouldn't surpass it.
Since a person can still be elected twice even if they have already served as President provided they served less than two years as a replacement, the same should be true in reverse order.
You are ineligible to be VP if you have served 2 terms as President. Edit: Simple Google search source you copied and pasted from is great.
 
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