President Donald Trump on Tuesday revealed his thoughts about running for president again in 2028, as he continues to boast of economic gains in the first year of his second term.
In an early morning interview with CNBC, Trump commented about earning the highest vote ever recorded in Texas and teased that the record would stand ‘unless I run again.’
‘Are you going to run again?’ asked co-host Becky Quick.
‘No, probably not,’ Trump replied with a chuckle.
‘I’d like to run, I have the best poll numbers I’ve ever had,’ he added. ‘People love the tariffs, and they love the trade deals and they love the foreign countries aren’t ripping us off.’
Trump’s answer demonstrated the chasm between his personal wishes and the constraints of the U.S. Constitution. Presidents are barred from serving more than two terms, even if they are non-consecutive as in Trump’s case.
Trump boasted he had the best poll numbers he’s ever had, prompting host Joe Kernen to point to media polls showing him with an approval rating in the 30s.
‘I won every swing state, I won the popular vote by millions of votes … my poll numbers are better now, much better than during the election,’ he said.
That hasn’t stopped Trump from stirring speculation with winks, nods and half-jokes about another campaign in 2028.
The Democratic party, he argued, was struggling to reassert themselves politically, making it difficult for them to mount a challenger.
‘The Democrats are lost, they have Trump derangement syndrome so bad that they can’t walk, they can’t talk, they don’t know where they are,’ he concluded.
American presidents are prevented from running for a third term, after the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was passed and ratified in 1951.
Trump has teased the idea in interviews, although he has conceded he is not yet planning on running for a third term.
In May, Trump reacted to the Trump organization selling red hats that read 2028, separate from his campaign operation.
NBC News anchor Kristen Welker asked the president during a interview in May if it was something he was considering.
‘I will say this – so many people want me to do it,’ Trump replied. ‘I have never had requests so strong as that.’
‘But it’s something that, to the best of my knowledge, you’re not allowed to do,’ he conceded. ‘I don’t know if that’s constitutional that they’re not allowing you to do it or anything else. But, there are many people selling the 2028 hat.’
Trump indicated he was willing to turn over his political movement to a ‘great Republican’ like Vice President JD Vance or Secretary Marco Rubio.
‘I’m looking to have four great years and turn it over to somebody, ideally a great Republican, a great Republican to carry it forward,’ Trump said.
The president has also cited polling showing that his supporters would welcome a third term of his presidency.
‘I’m not joking,’ Trump told NBC News in March, when asked to clarify his comments on the idea. ‘But I’m not — it is far too early to think about it.’
When asked about how he would do so, Trump said cryptically, ‘There are methods which you could do it.’
He has also said he would ‘love’ to run against Obama.
‘I’d love that …. That would be a good one,’ he said to Fox News reporter Peter Doocy in March. ‘I’d like that. And no, people are asking me to run, and there’s a whole story about running for a third term. I don’t know, I never looked into it. They do say there’s a way you can do it, but I don’t know about that.’
Trump supporters have mused on a possible loophole in the 22nd Amendment, suggesting that if Vice President JD Vance ran for president with Trump as his running mate, he could theoretically, resign, allowing a vice president Trump to ascend back into power.