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Trump says he is not joking about third presidential term

pmags 97 points reuters.com
explain
"There are, there are methods which you could do it, as you know," he said. He declined to elaborate on any specific methods.

There are, though. No need to act naive.

I support President Trump, but I don't support a third term and he wouldn't be able to pull it off (on the basis that a third term is not a good precedent).

The 22nd Amendment clearly states you can't be elected more than twice, not that you can't serve as President more than twice.

The earlier draft of the amendment was that you cannot serve as President more than twice. The "elected" language was intentional.

kccoder
I support President Trump

Why? I'm genuinely curious.

almosthere
He is delivering on what he promised and I support all of the things he promised. I was a democrat for 40 years of my 45 year old life.
maxerickson
This would be more interesting if you elaborated on a couple of promises and what you see as delivering.
cf100clunk
Is there a scorecard I can look at somewhere of promises-made, promises-kept, new-policies-never-promised?
croes
So prices are down, jobs are up, and the wars are over?
_DeadFred_
You say you support Trump but draw the line at a third term because “it’s not a good precedent.” But isn’t the deeper issue whether someone respects the spirit of the Constitution at all?

Laws and amendments aren’t just technicalities they only work because we as a society agree to follow not just the literal wording but the intent behind them. The "spirit of the law" the idea that power should be limited, that no one person should rule indefinitely, and that the Constitution sets boundaries we all agree to honor. If someone is already trying to twist the wording of the 22nd Amendment to find a loophole that’s a clear sign they’re not acting in good faith.

If you don't care when a President shows he doesn’t care about the spirit of the Constitution why would caring about precedent be a thing for you? Precedent is way down the line from keeping to the spirit of the Constitution. China has a constitution that guarantees democracy and free speech. Like Trump and your 'elected' workaround, the reality of their constitution is much different, all with China keeping closely to precedent.

gehwartzen
So what does that mean? Run as VP and have the president resign after taking office?
JumpCrisscross
what does that mean?

One would be causing red states to vote their Electors for Big Bird or whatever, thereby ensuring that “no Person have a Majority” of electoral votes[1], thus punting the Presidency to the House. (That or having Vance just throw out “bad” votes, again, throwing the election to the House.)

[1] https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-2/

techpineapple
I’m pretty sure to be VP you have to be an eligible P candidate.

But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.
Trasmatta
Or just claim fraud, and refuse to leave. See if the military will back you or not. He's got 4 years to keep weakening institutions and installing loyalist generals.
bediger4000
I'm surprised that you lean on the constitution's plain wording in your last 2 paragraphs (thank you, I, too, read it that way), but you support Trump. Virtually every one of his actions so far requires mental gymnastics to allow them as constitutional, or are plainly unconstitutional, leaving aside violating norms that have worked very well in the past.
blibble
if you're a bad guy trying for third term: you run for VP, then somehow P disappears

and now you're P again

gryfft
disappears

Or simply resigns.

Trasmatta
You support Trump, but aren't aware of the fact that he openly doesn't care about the constitution, and will do everything he can to circumvent it?
superb_dev
When has “not good precedent” ever stopped this president?
thiht
But apparently you’re crazy if you say the US is now a dictatorship and you won’t get a fair election in 4 years.
AnimalMuppet
No, the US is not currently a dictatorship.

The US currently has a president who tries to be a dictator, but that's not the same thing. And it has a congress that doesn't bother to check the president, but that's still not a dictatorship. And, as someone who lives in the US, the difference really matters.

The difference between this and a real dictatorship is the courts. If we lose that, we're in trouble.

dragonwriter
The difference between this and a real dictatorship is the courts. If we lose that, we're in trouble.

We don’t have to lose the courts to be in trouble, especially when the executive simply flouts inconvenient court orders with impunity.

We have a functional dictatorship with institutions which on paper have the authority and responsibility for constraining it which are either inactive because they tacitly support both the goals and dictatorial methods of the dictatorship (Congress) or too often, but not entirely, ineffective when they act (the courts). The difference between this and strongly-established dictatorship without a surviving formal basis for constraint is small and, historically, sometimes crossed rapidly and with very little additional warning.

AnimalMuppet
Well, he's flouted them. If by "with impunity", you mean that he hasn't been removed from office yet, then yes, he's done that.

If you mean that he's succeeded in making what he wanted happen despite the court order, then not so fast. We're still thrashing through the process of determining whether he will succeed in doing that.

I agree that he is dangerously close to running over the last remaining checks and balances.

defrost
I'm an outsider with an allied interest.

How many times can the Republicans "stop time" on appeals to executive orders?

They've already done this once to stop dead appeals to the courts in regards the "emergency tariff" executive orders with a simple rider to declare that "Each day [..] shall not constitute a calendar day" and thus bypassing a constraint that demanded an appeal be heard within a fixed number of calendar days.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43358343

Is there no limit to checking the legal checks and balances and rendering them moot?

rsynnott
If by "with impunity", you mean that he hasn't been removed from office yet, then yes, he's done that.

That ‘yet’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting, really. For practical purposes he can’t be removed from office. Like, at this point, it’s hard to come to any conclusion but that the system has failed.

adastra22
If checks and balances are not being enforced, I failed to see the distinction you’re trying to make.
AnimalMuppet
Um, the courts are part of the checks and balances...
croes
And what can the courts do if Trump ignores them?

They already ignored a judges's order https://www.axios.com/2025/03/16/trump-white-house-defy-judg...

adastra22
And court orders are not being enforced.
red-iron-pine
The difference between this and a real dictatorship is the courts. If we lose that, we're in trouble.

The Legislature creates the laws.

The Judicial interprets those laws.

The Executive carries out and acts on those laws.

It doesn't matter what the courts say if no one is willing to enforce it, or actively tries not to.

This eventually leads to a "make me" moment, such as when DOGE showed up and physically started pushing people out.

Ultimately this is a "the state is the monopoly of violence" discussion, which is the ultimate form of "make me". If no one is enforcing a court ruling, then someone will have to step up, to either carry it out, or to compel the Executive to do so.

thiht
the difference really matters

Does it though? If it quacks like a dictator and everybody lets him, it sounds like a dictatorship to me. Are you waiting for him to say "I declare this government to be a dictatorship" for it to be official? When the courts either ignore his illegal executive orders or make them legal, will you just say "well it's legal so not a dictatorship"? The red line you have in mind doesn't exist, because dictatorships are insidious.

cmurf
The Congress providing mere veneer of a republic isn't convincing. It's called Principate, and it's dictatorship.

A republic is an empire of laws, not men.

This executive is insisting he doesn't have to follow laws he doesn't personally like. A retroactive veto. It's contrary to the oath of office, and the duty to uphold the law. It's stated in the text.

This Congress is already merely decoration, serving an emperor, not their state's interests.

We have many examples of dictatorships with functioning courts.

root_axis
I think you're correct, though not because of the courts. The courts remain independent, but they demonstrably have no authority over Trump. However, Trump has not yet consolidated enough political power to start jailing political opposition. Once that line is crossed I think it's fair to say the u.s. has made the transition.
jfengel
They are already ignoring court orders:

https://www.axios.com/2025/03/16/trump-white-house-defy-judg...

I concur that there is still, barely, a difference between this and a dictatorship. But it's really, really, really tiny, and can vanish on a moment's notice. We're "in trouble" now.

lawn
The difference between this and a real dictatorship is the courts. If we lose that, we're in trouble.

Trump and his partners are already ignoring the courts, so by your own definition we're in big trouble.

breadwinner
The difference between this and a real dictatorship is the courts. If we lose that, we're in trouble.

Trump admin has ignored judge's orders regarding deportation. https://abcnews.go.com/US/trump-admin-ignores-judges-order-b...

perihelions
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/26/mike-johnson... ("Mike Johnson floats eliminating federal courts as Trump faces judicial pressure")
vinni2
It’s getting there.
breadwinner
From the interview:

“There are methods which you could do it,” the president said when asked whether there are strategies on the table to allow him to seek another term. Welker mentioned a possible plan in which Vice President JD Vance would run in 2028 and then “pass the baton” to Trump. “Well, that’s one. But there are others too,” the president said, before refusing to elaborate.

The other method of course, is to not have an election at all! Why risk losing?

Anyone who thinks there is going to be a presidential election in 2028 hasn't been paying attention. There is no way Trump is going to that risk. He doesn't have to. All checks and balances have been suppressed already.

JumpCrisscross
Welker mentioned a possible plan in which Vice President JD Vance would run in 2028 and then “pass the baton” to Trump

Curious how they’d do this. The Twelfth Amendment states that “no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States”[1].

Simplest would be to elect two randos, have the House choose Trump as Speaker[2], then have the randos resign[3].

[1] https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/amendment-12/

[2] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/house-speaker-non-member-of-con...

[3] https://www.usa.gov/presidential-succession

stubish
Or declaring martial law via the insurrection act if you follow the argument at https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/insurr... . Should become apparent around April 20th if protests turn out to help Trump, providing an excuse.
breadwinner
What is special about April 20?
stubish
When the joint report recommending “whether to invoke the Insurrection Act.” is due. Haven't seen it reported elsewhere, so might just be nonsense.
creatonez
It is the date that Trump has planned a fascist coup. Also the anniversary of Hitler's birthday.
senordevnyc
I understand the impulse here, but I think it's important not to jump too far ahead to conclude that of course we're not going to have elections, because it actually just shifts the overton window to the point where now we're arguing about whether we should.

It also just jumps ahead of where we are in reality. You could just as easily say "of course Trump is going to execute his political enemies on the lawn of the White House, because all the checks and balances that would prevent that have been removed!" Yes, that could happen, just like us not having an election in 2028 could happen, but that's a massive change that would effectively be the end of the republic, the end of the constitution, and likely result in a full-blown civil war. We may get there, but we are nowhere close to that yet.

AnimalMuppet
Well, let's see. He could change the constitution. That requires ratification by 3/4 of the states. That's not happening.

Or he's going to ignore the constitution. That seems much more likely.

It also seems almost certain to trigger a civil war.

Currently, Trump is the president. He's even my president. I don't like him much, I think he's making very foolish decisions, but he's my president.

But he's not my king. And if he tries to stay in power in violation of the constitution, he won't be my president, either, because it's the constitution that makes him president. If he's outside that, then he's not the president.

sitkack
I don't know how wise it is to spitball how to accomplish this in public without at the same time preventing those CVEs.
toomuchtodo
mizzao
It's interesting times when one finds oneself an unlikely supporter of the second amendment.
red-iron-pine
unlikely? the only reason you have OSHA, an 8 hour workday, and bans on 8 year olds working 7-days straight is because of labor riots that turned into running gun battles.

the right wing nutjobs weren't wrong about defending your rights by force if necessary. it's just that their "rights" included KKK ideology, and poor licensing rules for firearms that made it easy to shoot up elementary schools.

tim333
The most practical might be to run as Vance Trump rather than Trump Vance. Like the Putin Medvedev thing.
Trasmatta
He's been saying this since his first term. I'm shocked at the number of people that still to this day don't believe that he's going to try it (including a large number of posters on HN).

If he's still alive and even semi cogent in 2028, he's going to run for another term, whether or not the constitution allows it. He will do everything he possibly can to remain in power for as long as he's alive.

xenospn
He’s gotten away with literally everything he’s done so far. I don’t see why he wouldn’t get away with this as well.
AnimalMuppet
He's gotten away with literally everything (except Jean Carroll), because he is willing to spend unlimited amounts of money on lawyers for unlimited amounts of time. For this, that won't be good enough. Unlimited amounts of lawyers aren't going to change the constitution; they aren't going to make the Supreme Court ignore the constitution; they aren't going to prevent a literal shooting civil war if he ignores the constitution. He's gotten into deep enough water that his normal method isn't going to bail him out.
Tadpole9181
Except Jean Carroll? I feel like she'd disagree, being raped and him still being free and what-not.

Also, he has literally said he will ignore the courts. His administration already has with the deportations now. He has said that he will invade other countries. He has taken over power of the purse and nobody has stopped it. And he has congress, like Mike Johnson, saying they should dissolve the federal courts. He wields all enforcement arms of the government - what are they gonna do? Write another stern letter as his gestapo send them to El Salvador?

senordevnyc
He says all kinds of shit, most of it doesn't happen the way he says.
jfengel
As much as I detest the current Court, I don't think they are completely in Trump's thrall.

At least, not as long as John Roberts is alive. If he dies or retires, all bets are off.

I think he is completely prepared to work around them. The Republican party nominates him, he appears on the ballot in ~28 states, wins the election, and the Congress approves it. Roberts may not show up to administer the oath, but he's not going to make a statement against it. When he appoints new members, they'll be approved by Congress, and the court will accept them as valid because what else are they gonna do.

Somebody will surely sue -- but dollars to donuts they'll claim whoever it is won't have standing.

card_zero
First they came for the socialists, but they stayed for the ambiance.
archagon
Here's how they plan to do it: https://www.thirdtermproject.com/third-term

Constitutional Amendment: The U.S. Constitution can be amended by an act of Congress. Republicans must publicly get behind the third-term project.

Running as Vice President: President Trump can run as Vice President with a space filler as President in 2028. Perhaps Donald Trump Jr. could run on a Trump/Trump ticket before gracefully resigning on Jan. 21, 2028 after securing victory. This plan while unorthodox would show that MAGA cannot be stopped by any procedural rule.

Supreme Court Ruling: The 22nd Amendment bans anyone from serving two terms in office, but it is not completely clear if that refers to two presidential terms under any circumstances or two consecutive presidential terms. There are legal challenges in the works to clear up the ambiguity regarding the 22nd Amendment. The conservative rule-of-law justices on the Supreme Court would be able to settle this once and for all, making it clear that the 22nd Amendment would allow Trump a third term as it would only be his second consecutive term.

Aloisius
> The U.S. Constitution can be amended by an act of Congress

No, it can't. If 2/3 of the House & Senate agree, they can propose an amendment to send to the states. It then takes 3/4 of states ratifying it to actually amend the Constitution.

> Running as Vice President: President Trump can run as Vice President with a space filler as President in 2028.

The 12th Amendment likely bars that, because of the 22nd. If you're not eligible to to be President, you aren't eligible to be Vice President either.

> but it is not completely clear if that refers to two presidential terms under any circumstances or two consecutive presidential term

This is just plain nonsense. They might as well argue that it doesn't make it clear whether two is a number or not.

This whole thing is silly. Let's not forget that amending this would mean Obama would be eligible to run again.

Jtsummers
Let's not forget that amending this would mean Obama would be eligible to run again.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-second_Amendment_to_the...

Representative Andy Ogles put forward a proposal that would have kept Obama from running again, but allow Trump a third term. It would be a funny joke in a TV show, it's sad that someone wasted actual time on it though.

dns_snek
At which point do people decide to finally use the rights given to them by the 2nd amendment?

It's really a shame seeing how many school kids had to die for this supposedly necessary right - decades of pretending that it was a necessary cost to protect the US against tyranny.

jzackpete
how many people do you know who actually believe in the 2nd amendment and don't support trump? do you even live in the US?
dns_snek
I don't know anyone since I don't live in the US, but statistics[1] show that gun ownership among democrats is at 20% compared to 45% among republicans. It's substantially lower but still in the same order of magnitude.

[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/07/24/key-facts...

jfengel
Your popgun isn't going to do anything except get you killed.

The Second Amendment was intended to support fending off foreign invaders -- that whole "well regulated militia" thing. There wasn't a standing army at the time. As soon as we got one, the "second amendment" became moot.

The army is going to be extremely reluctant to fire on Americans. But if you come at them with a gun, they'll do it. You don't have even a billionth of their firepower.

water-data-dude
People have mistaken the symbol for the thing symbolized. The second amendment, in SPIRIT, is about protecting our ability to dissent and protest our government if it becomes tyrannical. If the people who are loudest about upholding the LETTER of the second amendment were actually serious about it then they’d also be advocating for strong cryptography and due process, and opposed to mass surveillance.
red-iron-pine
the only group that is serious about the 2nd are usually the ones in favor of Trump, unfortunately.

the anti-MAGA-action crowd still has not given up on the 1st Amendment, to the chagrin of the world and 2/3 of the US population.

far too many think that retweets or FB posts constitute action

TooSmugToFail
The grotesque irony of this situation is that the Democrats aren’t even able to put up a fight for democracy.
jmye
What specific things do you want them to do? Excited to hear about magical “protests” and “speeches” again.
red-iron-pine
What specific things do you want them to do?

change from relying solely on the First Amendment.

jfengel
They are relying on more than the First Amendment. They're relying on the 4th, 5th, and 14th as well. And, in extremis, the 22nd.

If you're suggesting that they rely on the Second... well, that's a lot to ask. I'm not saying you're wrong, if indeed all those amendments do fail, especially that last. But I think most people would rather the save the "fourth box" for last.

foldr
I know it’s not really how the US political system works, but the Democrats desperately need a single “leader of the opposition” figurehead. For some reason they seem to think that they have all the time in the world to choose their next candidate, even after the Harris debacle.
senordevnyc
Arguably, the Democrats put up way too much of a fight about democracy in the 2024 election, when surveys consistently showed that what voters cared most about wasn't safeguarding democracy, but the economy and immigration. You can argue that voters should care more, and prattle on about it, but that's how you lose an election and democracy.
happytoexplain
Democrats can't win on immigration. Even if they presented a plan to uncharacteristically reduce legal immigration, and somehow deport every single illegal immigrant and secure every border, they would still pledge humanity (due process, humane treatment, etc). The conservative version will always appear more effective because they pledge brutal tenacity with a sneer. People are desperate for the improvement they believe would occur (regardless of whether that's true), and not enough of them would have faith in a careful, measured version of the solution.
nprateem
The HN flagathon continues. Fewer things could be more relevant to entrepreneurship than the rule of law but everything uncomfortable still gets flagged.

Wish I could bury my head in the sand as easily.

disgruntledphd2
To be fair, although important, these comment threads do not gratify intellectual curiosity.

If anything, it just depresses me (and yet I keep going to /active to find them).

AlecSchueler
Don't they? I've heard people talking about a third term since October all over the web but this HN thread is the first where I've seen actual ideas floated about how he could do it. The reason I come to /active to find these threads rather than just reading the AP report is because I respect my co-commentors here a great deal and know that they're the type of people to try to verbalise the technical issues at play. In short because this is the only place where these discussions can satisfy my intellectual curiosity rather than just blindly feeding into/denying there's any need for hysteria.
disgruntledphd2
Don't they? I've heard people talking about a third term since October all over the web but this HN thread is the first where I've seen actual ideas floated about how he could do it.

Don't get me wrong, I've learned a bunch from these threads too, but there is a lot of anger, frustration and hatred in these threads, so I can definitely see why people tend to flag them (even though I don't do so myself).

yongjik
Everything Trump promised but did not do yet is obviously a joke, and if Democrats can't take a joke, it's their problem, or worse, something something Trump Derangement Syndrome.

Everything Trump promised (or did not promise) and did is totally fine, constitutional, and legal, and Democrats are a problem for not understanding it's basically the same thing as (some Clinton era policy which is clearly not related at all).

The moment Trump runs for his third term, every Trump supporter will find reasons why this is OK. To them, having an argument is like schoolyard bullying: consistency is for losers.

Jzush
eh, even if he did chances are pretty good most states won't put him on the ballot. He can bluster all he wants but no amount of bullcrap will allow for a 3rd term.
hypeatei
This was obvious to any serious person. The common "centrist" (shy Republican) take was that Dems were just being hyperbolic again. It was never surprising that Republicans would try to ratfuck 2028 to keep Trump in power and that his base would accept it considering what happened in 2021 at the Capitol.
pmags
Worried yet?
ThrowawayR2
Wrong question. The question should be: Is the Democratic Party worried yet? They sure don't seem to be, e.g. "CNN Poll: Democratic Party’s favorability drops to a record low" (https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/16/politics/cnn-poll-democrats/i...). If the leadership is not making any changes to win the voters back (which, as far as anyone can tell, they aren't) then it really doesn't matter how many politics submissions you make or snarky posts you make. The Democratic Party leadership is working hard to continue to lose and they seem to be on track to be succeed at it. Go hassle them instead of continuing to break the HN guidelines.
cf100clunk
I took the parent question more generally as applying to everyone everywhere and not parochially through the lens of U.S. partisan politics, which is important but only a facet of what is an extremely worrisome global-scale phenomenon.