logo
What to know about the possibility of Trump serving a third term

What to know about the possibility of Trump serving a third term

Yahoo11-02-2025
Murmurs from President Trump and his allies have stirred up questions of the incumbent possibly seeking a third term in office, even as he's currently constitutionally barred from doing so.
Trump has remarked on a few occasions since being sworn in for a second term that he wouldn't be running again unless people insist and decide to 'figure it out.' And Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) has even introduced a constitutional amendment that would specifically allow Trump to run for another term but not any of his two-term predecessors.
These efforts, which aren't entirely unheard of in recent history, would require a number of steps that make a third Trump term a considerable long shot.
Here's what you need to know:
Most presidents followed George Washington's tradition of not running for more than two terms. A few attempted a third term, but none were successful until former President Franklin Roosevelt won four terms amid the crises of the Great Depression and World War II.
After Republicans won control of Congress in 1946, they almost immediately introduced a resolution to limit the president's time in office. Brian Kalt, a law professor at Michigan State University who has studied the 22nd Amendment, said Democrats at the time weren't 'crazy about it,' but they didn't stop it and many supported it.
Once ratified, the amendment declared, 'No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice.' Presidents could also serve up to two years of a term that someone else was elected to and be elected to two additional terms, for a total of up to 10 years in office.
But the amendment has received some criticism since its ratification in 1951, and a few have called for repealing it.
Kalt said former President Eisenhower was so popular that some called for him to be able to serve a third term, but Eisenhower wasn't interested. In 1986, then-Rep. Guy Vander Jagt (R-Mich.) called for amending the Constitution to allow then-President Reagan to serve a third term.
'Ronald Reagan is one of the greatest American Presidents of all time, and I want to keep him on the job,' he wrote at the time.
Both Reagan and former President Clinton raised the idea of changing the amendment, with Clinton saying the limit should maybe be two consecutive terms, but both were speaking generally for the future and not referring to themselves.
Even though the proposals aren't entirely new, Trump has taken them to a new level in reference to his political future and isn't letting them go.
'The thing that's different about Trump is that in the past, the president would always be very demure about it,' Kalt said. 'They sort of take the approach of letting other people say that and keeping their hands up. That's not Trump's style. So obviously that's not the tone that he took in his recent remarks.'
Trump has discussed the possibility of a third term multiple times before and after being sworn in last month. In November, he said in comments to House Republicans: 'I suspect I won't be running again, unless you do something. Unless you say, 'He's so good, we have to just figure it out.''
Multiple Republicans said Trump was joking.
Trump said it again a week into office at the House GOP's annual policy retreat, saying he wasn't sure if he was allowed to run again and asking Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) if he could. Some again said he was joking, but Ogles introduced a resolution to amend the Constitution days earlier.
The amendment would allow Trump to run again because he was elected to nonconsecutive terms but prevent anyone from being elected to more than three terms overall or two consecutive terms.
'He has proven himself to be the only figure in modern history capable of reversing our nation's decay and restoring America to greatness, and he must be given the time necessary to accomplish that goal,' Ogles said.
While the 22nd Amendment precludes running for a third term, some arguable if unlikely loopholes exist, Kalt said.
The amendment clearly prevents being elected a third time, it doesn't state that someone can't be president a third time, though that doesn't mean it's allowed.
'This really gets to the heart of people's different views of how to interpret the Constitution because the loophole only emerges if you're really strictly limiting yourself to the text,' Kalt said. 'If you're saying, well, what's the point of the 22nd Amendment? What is it trying to accomplish? What it's trying to accomplish is, if you have two terms, then you leave and that's it.'
What's unsettled is if someone who has served two terms can be elected vice president, or a position lower down in the presidential line of succession and ascend to the presidency. The 12th Amendment states that no one ineligible to be president can serve as vice president, but it's arguable whether that applies to term limits, which were enacted later, or only the other constitutional qualifications like age.
'One thing is that no one has ever tried this… because it was part of our constitutional norms,' said Victoria Nourse, a law professor at Georgetown University who worked at the White House and Justice Department, about seeking a third term despite the 22nd.
'They're calling into question all sorts of things that no one has paid attention to for a very long time.'
If Ogles is serious and his resolution gains some momentum, the chances of this likely highly controversial amendment, or even less controversial ones, passing seem slim to none.
The Constitution places a high bar for passing an amendment, and it seems even more difficult in these highly polarized times. A resolution first must pass with two-thirds support in both houses of Congress, and then three-quarters of all state legislatures, equal to 38 states, must ratify it.
A post from the Constitution Center from last month noted just how difficult and rare passing an amendment is, intentionally so. Since the 27th Amendment was ratified in 1992, more than 1,400 have been proposed in Congress, but none has received the two-thirds vote to go to the states, the post said.
But Nourse argued that Trump's words should still be taken seriously regardless of the low chances of this coming to fruition.
'What happens is it takes it from the crazy off the wall to on the wall,' she said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

One Of Trump's Biggest Celebrity Fans Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer
One Of Trump's Biggest Celebrity Fans Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

One Of Trump's Biggest Celebrity Fans Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer

ICE has been ramping up efforts to recruit new agents. They've gotten rid of the age cap. They're offering studen loan forgiveness and a $50,000 sign up bonus. Related: They're saying you don't need an undergraduate degree. And they're using South Park pics to entice anyone to join. Well, one of Trump's *famous* fans says he's signed up. In case you didn't know, Dean Cain is best known for playing Superman in the early '90s series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. Related: Nowadays, he's a permanent Trump fanboy, tweeting stuff like this: This: And this: Related: Now, he's joining ICE. Cain told Jesse Watters on Fox, "I put out a recruitment video yesterday. I'm actually a sworn deputy sheriff and a reserve police officer. I wasn't part of ICE, but once I put that out there and you put a little blurb on your show, it went crazy. So now I've spoken with some officials over at ICE, and I will be sworn in as an ICE agent ASAP. So they'll have 88,001 recruits for their 10,000 positions." "Are you gonna be hopping out of ICE vans and apprehending guys?" Watters asks. "I will do Director Lyons tells me what to do. If that what it takes. Absolutely, I somehow doubt I'll be in that position, but I'll be there in a heartbeat." Later in the interview, Watters asks, "What is it about serving this country that is inspiring to you?" Related: "This country was built on patriots stepping up, whether it was popular or not, and doing the right thing. I truly believe this is the right thing. Listen, the United States takes in more legal immigrants than the next four countries combined," he says. "We have a broken immigration system. Congress needs to fix it, but in the interim, President Trump ran on this. He is delivering on this. This is what people voted for. It's what I voted for, and he's going to see it through, and I'll do my part and help him make sure it happens." So, there you have it, Dean Cain is joining ICE. Let's see if Roseanne steps up next! Also in Celebrity: Also in Celebrity: Also in Celebrity: Solve the daily Crossword

Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel ‘intends to' take over all of Gaza
Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel ‘intends to' take over all of Gaza

New York Post

time24 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel ‘intends to' take over all of Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday said his country will forge ahead on its plan to take over all of Gaza, despite widespread opposition — but added that he doesn't 'want to keep it' and pledged to 'hand it over to Arab forces.' 'We intend to [take over all of Gaza] assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza and to pass it to civilian governance that is not Hamas and not anyone advocating the destruction of Israel,' Netanyahu said in an interview with Fox News. REUTERS The latter distinction would likely mean a country subscribing to Trump's Abraham Accords would be selected by the Jewish state. President Trump has not explicitly given Israel the go ahead to take over the war-torn enclave, Netanyahu said — but the country doesn't need the US' permission to do so. 'He understands it's Israel who's doing the fighting — it's not American soldier,' he said. 'He just says, 'I know Israel will do what it has to do.''

A Major Trump-Supporting Celebrity Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer
A Major Trump-Supporting Celebrity Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer

Buzz Feed

time24 minutes ago

  • Buzz Feed

A Major Trump-Supporting Celebrity Just Signed Up To Be An ICE Officer

ICE has been ramping up efforts to recruit new agents. They've gotten rid of the age cap. They're offering studen loan forgiveness and a $50,000 sign up bonus. They're saying you don't need an undergraduate degree. And they're using South Park pics to entice anyone to join. Well, one of Trump's *famous* fans says he's signed up. In case you didn't know, Dean Cain is best known for playing Superman in the early '90s series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. Nowadays, he's a permanent Trump fanboy, tweeting stuff like this: This: And this: Now, he's joining ICE. Cain told Jesse Watters on Fox, "I put out a recruitment video yesterday. I'm actually a sworn deputy sheriff and a reserve police officer. I wasn't part of ICE, but once I put that out there and you put a little blurb on your show, it went crazy. So now I've spoken with some officials over at ICE, and I will be sworn in as an ICE agent ASAP. So they'll have 88,001 recruits for their 10,000 positions." "Are you gonna be hopping out of ICE vans and apprehending guys?" Watters asks. "I will do Director Lyons tells me what to do. If that what it takes. Absolutely, I somehow doubt I'll be in that position, but I'll be there in a heartbeat." Later in the interview, Watters asks, "What is it about serving this country that is inspiring to you?" "This country was built on patriots stepping up, whether it was popular or not, and doing the right thing. I truly believe this is the right thing. Listen, the United States takes in more legal immigrants than the next four countries combined," he says. "We have a broken immigration system. Congress needs to fix it, but in the interim, President Trump ran on this. He is delivering on this. This is what people voted for. It's what I voted for, and he's going to see it through, and I'll do my part and help him make sure it happens." So, there you have it, Dean Cain is joining ICE. Let's see if Roseanne steps up next!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store