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Speaking with reporters on board Air Force One en route to Japan on Monday, President Trump again refused to rule out a bid for a third presidential term, despite the 22nd Amendment limiting presidents to being elected twice. “I would love to do it,” Trump said when asked about the prospect of a 2028 presidential bid. The president’s remarks immediately reignited debate over the constitutional restrictions placed on presidential terms. Read more:
Speaking with reporters on board Air Force One en route to Japan on Monday, President Trump again refused to rule out a bid for a third presidential term, despite the 22nd Amendment limiting presidents to being elected twice.
“I would love to do it,” Trump said when asked about the prospect of a 2028 presidential bid.
**Trump Hints at Possible Third Term Despite Constitutional Limits**
*October 2025 — Aboard Air Force One*
Speaking with reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Japan on Monday, President Donald Trump once again declined to rule out seeking a third term in office — a move that would challenge the 22nd Amendment’s two-term limit on the presidency.
“I would love to do it,” Trump said when asked about the possibility of running again in 2028. “A lot of people are saying it would only be fair, considering everything we’ve done and the unfair treatment we’ve faced. We’ll see what happens.”
The president’s remarks immediately reignited debate over the constitutional restrictions placed on presidential terms. The 22nd Amendment, ratified in 1951 after Franklin D. Roosevelt’s four-term presidency, explicitly limits any individual to being elected president no more than twice.
White House officials later sought to downplay the comments, suggesting the president was “speaking hypothetically.” However, Trump has repeatedly floated the idea of extending his time in office, framing it as a response to what he often calls “historic success” during his administration.
Legal scholars and political analysts were quick to note that any attempt to alter the 22nd Amendment would face enormous legal and political hurdles, requiring approval from two-thirds of both houses of Congress and ratification by three-fourths of the states.
While no formal effort to amend the Constitution has been introduced, Trump’s latest remarks underscore his continued dominance over the Republican Party — and his penchant for testing political boundaries as he heads into the final years of his second term.
