Trump says he’s ‘not joking’ about serving third term as president – and suggests one way he thinks he could do it

Despite being prohibited by the Constitution under the 22nd Amendment from standing for election again, President Donald Trump did not rule out the possibility of seeking a third term in the White House during an interview with NBC News.
Trump said that there were methods for doing so, even clarifying that he was “not joking” in his conversation with Kristen Welker, moderator of Meet the Press.
“A lot of people want me to do it,” the president said, referring to his allies. “But, I mean, I basically tell them we have a long way to go, you know, it’s very early in the administration.”
“I’m focused on the current,” Trump added.
When asked whether he really wanted another term, the president responded: “I like working.”
“I’m not joking,” Trump said when asked to clarify by Welker, who even began her line of questioning with the assumption that he was. “But I’m not — it is far too early to think about it.”
Asked how he might go about seeking a third term and whether he has been presented with plans to allow him to do so, the president replied: “There are methods [by] which you could do it.”
Welker asked about a possible scenario in which Vice President JD Vance ran for the presidency with Trump as his running mate and then passed the role over to him. The president responded, “That’s one” method, adding: “But there are others too.”
Asked to share another method, he responded: “No.”
Amending the Constitution to eliminate the two-term limit would be extremely challenging, requiring either a two-thirds vote in Congress or two-thirds of the states to agree to convene a constitutional convention to propose changes. Either option would then need ratification from three-quarters of the states.
Trump maintains that “a lot of people would like me to” hold office for a third term.
These were his most extensive comments on the matter. Previous remarks have often been dismissed as jokes or the president trolling his critics and opponents.
The 22nd Amendment says “no person shall be elected” as president “more than twice.”
While the first president, George Washington, set an example of serving a maximum of two terms, Franklin D Roosevelt was beginning his fourth when he died in office in 1945. Six years later Congress passed the 22nd Amendment to constitutionally limit presidents to two full terms.