In a Sunday-morning phone call with NBC News, Trump said
“I’m not joking,” when asked to clarify a remark on seeking another term,
adding: “There are methods which you could do it.”
The 78-year-old billionaire has a history of suggesting he
might serve more than two terms, but Sunday’s remarks were the most concrete in
terms of referring to plans to achieve the goal.
Trump has launched his second presidency with an
unprecedented blitz of executive power, using the world’s richest man, Elon
Musk, to dismantle swaths of the government, and said his supporters want even
more.
“A lot of people want me to do it,” Trump told NBC News on
Sunday. “But, I mean, I basically tell them we have a long way to go, you know,
it’s very early in the administration.”
Amending the US constitution to allow a third presidential
term would require a two-thirds majority in both the House and Senate, which
Trump’s Republican Party does not have.
Trump said it was “far too early to think about it,” but
told NBC he had been presented with plans that would allow him to seek
reelection.
When NBC asked Trump of a possible scenario whereby Vice
President JD Vance would run for president and then abdicate the role to Trump,
the US president said “that’s one” method.
He added that “there are others,” but refused to share
further details.
If Trump does not approach Congress for the constitutional
amendment, he would need to get support from two-thirds of the country’s 50
states to call a constitutional convention that would propose changes to the
charter.
Whether he goes through Congress or the states, he would
then require ratification from three-quarters of all states.
Both routes appear to be unlikely, given the current number
of states and Congressional seats under Republican control.
A constitutional convention has never been successfully
called in the United States, where all 27 constitutional amendments have been passed
by the congressional method.
In January, days after Trump took office, Republican Andy
Ogles of Tennessee introduced a House joint resolution to amend the
constitution to allow presidents up to three terms.