Trump's teasing about pursuing a third term because of his polls; here's what to know about the legal issues. What would Minnesotans do?
President Donald Trump could not run for a third term, but he could be president a third time, according to law professor Bill Jacobson.
President Donald Trump said in a March 30 interview that "there are methods" for him to serve a third term in the White House, and a Daily Mail article referred to a "loophole" in the 22nd Amendment that would make it possible.
House Speaker Mike Johnson gave a quick reality check to President Trump’s musings about pursuing a third term in the White House, noting that amending the Constitution is a “high
“Republicans are waging an all-out attack on the Judiciary to clear the way for Trump to serve a third term,” he said. Trump would rather talk about challenging the Constitution than about the ...
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Trump is a lame duck president in his final term. Because termed-out politicians will never be on the ballot for the same office again, their political clout usually wanes quickly. The third-term flirtation is a way to try to convince people that Trump will be around in the future.
GOP Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana told CNN’s Pamela Brown that he “likes the Constitution as written” and said he believes most Americans feel similarly.
The 22nd Amendment says, “No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice.” The incumbent president doesn't fully accept that.