Katie
Rogers
Oct. 29,
2025, 12:16 a.m. ET5 hours ago
Erica L.
Green and Katie RogersReporting from Gyeongju, South Korea
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/10/28/us/trump-news-south-korea#third-term-limit
Trump
suggests he knows he can’t run for a third term.
Speaking
with reporters aboard Air Force One, President Trump said it was “too bad” that
he couldn’t run for president in 2028.
President
Trump seemed to concede on Wednesday that he was not eligible to serve a third
term, lamenting that it was an unfortunate result of the constitutional
prohibition that he has mused about violating for months.
Speaking
to reporters aboard Air Force One en route to South Korea, the last leg of his
three-country diplomatic tour across Asia, Mr. Trump said it was “too bad” that
he couldn’t run in 2028.
“We have
the greatest economy we’ve ever had, I have my highest poll numbers that I’ve
ever had,” he boasted (his approval rating remains low, at 43 percent,
according to a New York Times average). “And, you know, based on what I read, I
guess I’m not allowed to run. So we’ll see what happens.”
The
remarks came after House Speaker Mike Johnson said on Tuesday there was no path
around the Constitution’s two-term limit.
“I don’t
see a way to amend the Constitution — I don’t see the path for that,” Mr.
Johnson said — but not before complimenting the “Trump 2028” cap that the
president likes to wear and display in the Oval Office, and noting that it was
still fun to entertain the idea.
Mr.
Trump, asked about Mr. Johnson’s conclusion, which the speaker said he had
discussed with the president, said he didn’t “want to talk about it” before
listing accomplishments, such as resolving several conflicts and rising stock
prices, that he said made him the ideal candidate.
Since
retaking the White House, Mr. Trump has repeatedly teased that he may never
leave. For several months, Mr. Trump has discussed serving a third term,
vacillating between joking to goad his critics and signaling that it would be
one of many ways he would seek to test the bounds of his constitutional
authority.
Just this
week, Mr. Trump said, “I would love to do it,” when asked about serving another
four years.
Asked on
Wednesday whether he had been “trolling” or serious about serving, Mr. Trump
indicated that he had come to terms with the 22nd Amendment, which states that
“no person shall be elected to the office of the president more than twice,”
regardless of whether the terms are consecutive. .
“If you
read it, it’s pretty clear — I’m not allowed to run,” he said. “It’s too bad.”
Last
week, Stephen K. Bannon, Mr. Trump’s former strategist, said vaguely that there
was “a plan” to help the president get elected to a third term.
“Trump is
going to be president in ’28, and people ought to just get accommodated with
that,” he said.
Mr.
Trump’s allies have floated the possibility of finding a legal loophole, such
as a scenario in which Mr. Trump runs on a ticket as vice president and ascends
to the presidency once elected.
On
Monday, Mr. Trump said that although it would be legal for him to do that, he
wouldn’t want to. “I would rule that out, because it’s too cute,” he said. “I
think the people wouldn’t like that.”
Mr. Trump
has said that the Republican Party has other great candidates, and has floated
the notion of his vice president, JD Vance, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio
running together on a ticket.
Annie
Karni contributed reporting from Washington.


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