He US President Donald Trumpassured that “he would love” to opt for a third term in the White Housealthough the Constitution prevents it, but supported the idea that his Vice President, JD Vance, and Secretary of State, Marco Rubioform a candidacy for the 2028 elections, which in their opinion would be “unstoppable.” “I would love to do it. I have my best (poll) numbers to date. It’s tremendous,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One before arriving in Japan. The president highlighted the formula of Vance, as a candidate for president, and Rubio, as vice president, for the 2028 elections. “I think that if at some point they formed a group they would be unstoppable,” he said. “I don’t think anyone would come forward against us.”
The head of American diplomacy (Rubio), who was next to the president, smiled when he was proposed by Trumpbut avoided making any statements about it. The president was asked after Steve Bannon, his former advisor, assured in an interview that there is already a plan so that Trump can spend another term in the White House, something that is limited by the 22nd amendment of the Constitution. The Twenty-second Amendment to the US Constitution states that “no person may be elected to the office of president more than twice” and was ratified in 1951 after the four terms that President Franklin D. Roosevelt obtained in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944. When pressed by a journalist about whether he finally ruled out the possibility of there being a third term, which he himself has suggested On several occasions, Trump assured that his Administration has “a great group of people” for the 2028 elections, however, in his opinion, the Democrats “do not.”
The Republican accused some of the most visible faces of liberals of having “a low IQ.” These statements come after Trump himself, and his entourage, have left some clues that reveal his intention to run again, such as photos of a cap that he has on display in the White House that reads ‘Trump 2028’ like the one he used in the last presidential campaign. Furthermore, a few days ago, the governor of California, the Democrat Gavin Newsom, with whom Trump has a confrontation, and former Vice President Kamala Harris, who lost against him last November, have shown themselves in favor of being the candidates of the Democratic Party in the next elections.
