When Donald Trump jokes, Washington listens — and then nervously checks the Constitution.
While members of Congress have brushed off the idea of a Trump third term as pure theater, the president’s mixed messages suggest he’s enjoying keeping everyone guessing — and maybe, just maybe, seeing how far the joke can go.
The 22nd Amendment is clear — a president can serve only two terms. But that hasn’t stopped Trump or his supporters from fanning speculation that he might somehow find a way around it. Trump 2028 hats, T-shirts, and can coolers are already selling briskly online, and a small group of loyalists — calling themselves The Third Term Project — are floating far-fetched legal workarounds to keep him in office, Axios reported.
Asked Monday if he’d rule out running again, Trump dodged — saying only that he “would love to do it.” He also mused about a possible JD Vance–Marco Rubio ticket and joked that his poll numbers are so high “another run could be on the table.”
The constitutional reality:
The 22nd Amendment explicitly bars anyone from being elected president more than twice. To overturn that rule would require either:
Trump’s not-so-serious history of teasing it:
Trump’s third-term talk may be trolling, nostalgia, or political theater — but it’s also a test balloon. The Constitution may say two terms max, but as long as Trump’s selling $50 “Trump 2028” hats, it’s safe to say the idea — joke or not — isn’t going away anytime soon.
While members of Congress have brushed off the idea of a Trump third term as pure theater, the president’s mixed messages suggest he’s enjoying keeping everyone guessing — and maybe, just maybe, seeing how far the joke can go.
The 22nd Amendment is clear — a president can serve only two terms. But that hasn’t stopped Trump or his supporters from fanning speculation that he might somehow find a way around it. Trump 2028 hats, T-shirts, and can coolers are already selling briskly online, and a small group of loyalists — calling themselves The Third Term Project — are floating far-fetched legal workarounds to keep him in office, Axios reported.
Asked Monday if he’d rule out running again, Trump dodged — saying only that he “would love to do it.” He also mused about a possible JD Vance–Marco Rubio ticket and joked that his poll numbers are so high “another run could be on the table.”
The constitutional reality:
The 22nd Amendment explicitly bars anyone from being elected president more than twice. To overturn that rule would require either:
- A constitutional convention called by 34 states (an improbable scenario), or
- An act of Congress amending the Constitution (a political impossibility).
Trump’s not-so-serious history of teasing it:
- March 2018: Praised China’s Xi Jinping for being “president for life” and joked, “Maybe we’ll give that a shot someday.”
- December 2019: Told students, “If you want to drive them crazy, say ‘16 more years.’”
- August 2020: Argued he deserved “a redo” of his first term because “they spied on my campaign.”
- April 2025: Claimed there are “methods” that could make it possible — and insisted, “I’m not joking.”
- May 2025: Walked it back, saying he’d rather “turn it over to a great Republican.”
- 2025: Who can forget Trump 2028 hat which was the part of main political discussion.
- October 2025: When pressed, replied slyly, “Am I not ruling it out? You’ll have to tell me.”
Trump’s third-term talk may be trolling, nostalgia, or political theater — but it’s also a test balloon. The Constitution may say two terms max, but as long as Trump’s selling $50 “Trump 2028” hats, it’s safe to say the idea — joke or not — isn’t going away anytime soon.
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