HomeWorldTrump’s third-term talk, explained: Why he keeps floating an unconstitutional run

Trump’s third-term talk, explained: Why he keeps floating an unconstitutional run

The 22nd Amendment bars it, but the politics of teasing a third term serve Trump in the here and now.

October 28, 2025 / 13:21 IST
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US President Donald Trump (Courtesy: Reuters photo)
US President Donald Trump (Courtesy: Reuters photo)

En route between Kuala Lumpur and Tokyo, President Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One, “I would love to do it,” referring to a third run for the presidency after his current term. He added that he hadn’t really thought about it, even as allies keep the idea alive. The remark extends a norm-busting theme of his second term: pushing at limits to maximize personal power, the New York Times reported.

What the US Constitution actually says

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There’s no ambiguity in the 22nd Amendment: no one can be elected president more than twice. Legally, the conversation could end there. The question, then, isn’t feasibility — it’s why the president keeps talking about something the Constitution prohibits.

Why keep saying it