President Trump aboard Air Force One discussing a potential third term, with reporters and airplane interior in the background.

Aboard Air Force One, Trump says he’d “love” a third term, rules out VP workaround

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On October 27, 2025, en route to Japan, President Donald Trump declined to rule out seeking a third term in 2028 while dismissing a vice‑presidential end run as “too cute,” comments that drew swift reaction as the White House faces scrutiny over a controversial East Wing demolition.

President Donald Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on October 27 that he has not “really thought about” running again in 2028 but “would love to do it,” while reiterating praise for Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as future standard‑bearers. He also said a Vance–Rubio ticket could be “unstoppable.” The exchange occurred during a multi‑nation Asia trip as the presidential plane headed to Japan. Trump added that running as someone else’s vice president to return to the Oval Office would be “too cute” and “wouldn’t be right.” (reuters.com)

The remarks followed fresh attention to comments by former chief strategist Steve Bannon, who told The Economist there is “a plan” for Trump to serve again despite constitutional limits. In a widely circulated clip of the interview, Bannon said: “He’s going to get a third term … there’s a plan, and President Trump will be the president in ’28.” (realclearpolitics.com)

Pressed on legalities, Trump acknowledged the vice‑presidential route has been floated by some allies but said he would not pursue it. The U.S. Constitution’s 22nd Amendment—ratified in 1951 after Franklin D. Roosevelt’s four elections—bars anyone from being elected president more than twice; the 12th Amendment states that no person “constitutionally ineligible” to the presidency may serve as vice president. Constitutional scholars broadly view a third term as foreclosed under current law. (reaganlibrary.gov)

Trump also repeated a refrain from earlier this month, saying he had “solved eight wars” and suggesting a ninth—Russia‑Ukraine—“will happen.” He made similar claims during an Oct. 17 appearance with Ukraine’s president at the White House. (tass.com)

Names and roles: Vance is serving as vice president and Rubio as secretary of state, posts to which they were sworn in after Trump took office in January. (whitehouse.gov)

Reaction

– On ABC’s The View, co‑hosts said Trump’s third‑term talk should be taken seriously. Sunny Hostin linked the rhetoric to ongoing White House construction, saying Trump “is hooking up the White House because he doesn’t plan on leaving it,” while Whoopi Goldberg recalled prior statements and added, “He said, ‘I want to be president for life.’” Ana Navarro called Trump “authoritarian” and, noting his age, said he is “showing his age.” Multiple entertainment and media outlets recapped the segment on Oct. 27. (mediaite.com)

– CNN also aired discussion of Bannon’s interview and Trump’s comments; in a segment highlighted online, historian Alexis Coe characterized the third‑term talk as a “threat,” according to the Daily Wire’s write‑up of the day’s reaction. Because CNN did not immediately post a transcript of Coe’s remark, that characterization is attributed to the Daily Wire report. (dailywire.com)

– Cenk Uygur, host of The Young Turks, wrote on X that Trump “hasn’t ruled out a third term” but the Constitution “already ruled it out,” a sentiment echoed by other commentators after large “No Kings” protests earlier in October. (The Uygur post was reported by the Daily Wire; we did not find an official X archive for independent verification.) (dailywire.com)

Context: East Wing demolition and ballroom plan

The dust‑up comes as the White House faces bipartisan criticism for demolishing the East Wing and proposing a 90,000‑square‑foot ballroom, with Trump recently boosting the estimated cost to $300 million and asserting the project is privately funded. A Virginia couple filed a motion in federal court seeking to halt the demolition; legal experts note unique exceptions for the White House under preservation law could complicate such challenges. (washingtonpost.com)

Bottom line

Trump’s comments keep the spotlight on third‑term chatter ignited by Bannon’s interview, but the constitutional bar remains clear: Americans have limited presidents to two elections since 1951, and the 12th Amendment blocks any vice‑presidential workaround for someone ineligible for the presidency. (reaganlibrary.gov)

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