No, Trump can no longer stand for re-election in 2028

Trump administration 

Trump Administration

Trump administration

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The Constitution sets a two-term limit for presidents. Still, Donald J. Trump has floated the idea of staying longer, and a long-shot resolution from a Republican representative seeks to pave the way.

By Neil Vigdor

President Trump has mused more than once that he might like to extend his stay at the White House. But can he run for re-election again in 2028 and seek a third term? The simple answer: No, the Constitution does not allow it.

This did not prevent one of the MR. Trump in the Chamber, representative Andy Ogles, a Republican from Tennessee, brought a long -lasting solution that sought to replace the law in a while after Mr. Trump was reinstated.

By the end of his second term, Mr. Trump, now 78, would be the oldest president in history.

Here is why the emergence has emerged and what the law says:

At the beginning of the week of his time, Trump introduced the concept that the limits of the presidential mandate can be negotiable while talking to the House Republicans of the Chamber of his annual retirement in Florida.

“I’ve raised a lot of cash for the next race that I guess I can’t use for myself, but I’m not a hundred consistent with Cent for sure because I don’t know,” Mr. Trump said through laughter. I don’t think I’ll be allowed to race again. I’m not sure.

Trump then asked House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, for his opinion on the before stopping his opinion.

“Micro?” Said. “I’d better worry about this argument. “

While chatting with the Los Angeles Républicins Chamblins in November to win the White House and the two Congress cameras, Trump has shaped the joke that they can prolong their presidency.

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