On Politics: ‘I would love to do it’
The Constitution bars a third term for Trump — but it can’t stop him from talking about one.
On Politics
October 27, 2025

Trump’s Washington

How President Trump is changing government, the country and its politics.

Good evening. President Trump said he’d “love” to run for a third term. We’re looking at how his dalliance with the concept is already shaping politics — and we’ll map out his National Guard deployments. We’ll start with the headlines.

President Trump walking on an airport tarmac. A helicopter is in the background and two men in suits are looking on at left and right.
President Trump has kept the idea of running again front and center throughout his second term. Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Why Trump won’t quit third-term talk

Last week, President Trump demolished the East Wing of the White House, acknowledged demanding hundreds of millions of dollars from his own government and extended a campaign of blowing up boats in foreign waters that legal specialists describe as unlawful.

This morning, somewhere between Kuala Lumpur and Tokyo, he returned to a different, norm-busting leitmotif of a presidency intended to maximize his personal power: teasing the idea of running for a constitutionally prohibited third term.

“I would love to do it,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One.

He added, not entirely convincingly, that he hadn’t really thought about it — although his allies certainly have.

It’s unclear whether Trump, who survived two assassination attempts last year and would be the oldest president in history by the time he leaves office, is serious. The 22nd Amendment plainly states that no one can be elected president more than twice. Legally speaking, the discussion — and this newsletter — could end right here.

What is clear, though, is that a president who has chafed at the limits on his power sees great political benefit in talking about it — and his musings may already be having their intended effect. Tonight, I’ll explain why.

A long history

President Trump spent decades publicly toying with running for president, knowing full well that just talking about it can get you attention. That remains the case even when you already are the president.

In 1988, he told Oprah Winfrey that he “probably wouldn’t” run for president, but that he wouldn’t rule it out, either. “I really am tired of seeing what’s happening with this country, how we’re really making other people live like kings, and we’re not,” he said.

Two years later, he mused in Playboy about how he would handle an international crisis as president, saying he believed in extreme military strength and that he “wouldn’t trust the Russians.”

Dallying with running for president kept Trump, then a flashy real estate developer, in the headlines, and, then as now, the attention might be the whole point. My colleague Maggie Haberman reported early this year that Trump has told his advisers that he sees third term talk as a way to grab the spotlight and anger Democrats.

But she made another observation then that is worth remembering:

Even when Mr. Trump presents something as a joke, the idea he suggests often becomes socialized by his supporters, both those in office and in the right-wing media. The concept then often takes on more weight, including for Mr. Trump.

The political impact

Trump has kept the idea of running again front and center throughout his second term. He has joked about staying in office for 25 years. There were Trump 2028 hats on his desk during a meeting with congressional leaders this month. Some Republicans have begun to endorse the idea. And last week, Trump’s former adviser Steve Bannon insisted there was a “plan” for the president to seek another term, although he did not say what it was.

In doing so, Trump has firmly injected the idea into the national conversation, keeping him from being seen as the most ineffectual of Washington stereotypes, a lame duck.

And, crucially, it makes it difficult for any other Republican to chart a path out of the Trump era, because doing so could be read as defiance against a party leader who isn’t ready to move on.

Even as Trump teased the idea of running for president himself, he was eager to set the parameters of a race without him, one that would pit two of the most recognizable members of his administration against one another — while he looms as a powerful kingmaker.

“We have great people, I don’t have to get into that. But we have one of them standing right here,” Trump said, referring to Secretary of State Marco Rubio before bringing up Vice President JD Vance.

“The vice president is great,” he continued, “I’m not sure if anybody would run against those two.”

It sounded less like an observation than an order.

Pia Habersang stands in a medical exam room. She is wearing a black sweater and black glasses.
Pia Habersang at the children’s clinic that she runs in Amarillo, Texas. Nick Oxford for The New York Times

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“The medical community hates me. And you know? I don’t care.”

That’s Pia Habersang, who runs a children’s clinic in Amarillo, Texas, that welcomes parents suspicious of vaccinations and advises them to be aware of a possible connection to autism.

Virtually all medical experts, my colleague Edgar Sandoval writes, have rejected the ideas Habersang posits. But the secretary of health and human services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has empowered vaccine skeptics in and out of the government with an assist from President Trump. That’s created an opening for professionals like Habersang, a nurse practitioner with a doctorate in child and youth studies.

About 80 percent of her patients choose not to vaccinate their children, or stop vaccinating them before completing the recommended schedule. Those who spoke with Edgar said they were not shaken by the measles outbreak in West Texas, which has sickened hundreds of patients and killed two young girls.

More on health:

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IN ONE GRAPHIC

A map of where and how the national guard has been deployed to U.S. cities.
Note: National Guard deployments to Chicago and Portland were temporarily blocked by a court order. Elements of the District of Columbia National Guard were activated and deployed to Washington, D.C. Lazaro Gamio/The New York Times

Since taking office, President Trump has relied on the National Guard to help enact a sweeping agenda on crime and immigration, kicking off a blitz of deployments that have rattled cities, tested the limits of his legal authority and drawn in the Supreme Court.

Troops have been deployed across state lines as Trump turns to the military to help enforce his domestic priorities. My colleagues have laid out exactly where they’re going — and the legal justification he’s using to send them there. See more here.

A portrait of Josh Shapiro standing in a room in the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion. He is wearing a dark suit and a white shirt, with no tie.
Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania is widely seen as a potential presidential candidate in 2028. Greg Kahn for The New York Times

ONE TO READ

How the firebombing of his home changed Josh Shapiro

Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania is one of the country’s most prominent Jewish Democrats. Six months ago, the political violence plaguing the nation landed in his own house, when an assailant broke into the governor’s mansion during Passover and firebombed the room where he had celebrated Seder just hours before.

In his most revealing interview about that attack to date, Shapiro told my colleague Katie Glueck that he’s still grappling with the aftermath of that attack and the risk it posed to his children, who were sleeping in the house at the time. He said he now advises others who have been touched by political violence and potential candidates who worry about the risks.

Shapiro, who was passed over to join Kamala Harris’s presidential ticket as vice president, is widely seen as a potential presidential candidate in 2028. He said his family has talked about whether staying in politics is worth it.

“What I’ve said is, if I leave because violence pushed us out or scared us, then those who want to perpetuate political violence win,” he told Katie. “I’ve got to stay, and I’ve got to show that we’re not afraid.”

Read more here.

MORE POLITICS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Side-by-side pictures show Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, wearing a white shirt holding a microphone, and former Representative Abigail Spanberger, in a purple blazer and white shirt.

Mike Kropf/Richmond Times-Dispatch, via Associated Press; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Why Attacks on Spanberger Don’t Seem to Stick in Va. Governor’s Race

Abigail Spanberger, the Democratic nominee, has a commanding lead in polls. Her Republican rival, Winsome Earle-Sears, has focused on a texting scandal involving the Democrat running for attorney general.

By Reid J. Epstein

A student fills out a worksheet.

Lea Suzuki/The San Francisco Chronicle, via Getty Images

How Politics Is Changing the Way History Is Taught

History lessons are being wiped from the internet, and California is retreating from ethnic studies, as education swings away from curriculums that are seen as too progressive.

By Dana Goldstein

Gov. Mike Braun, in a suit, speaking.

Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

Indiana Governor Calls Special Session to Boost Republicans in Congress

Indiana is the latest state to consider redrawing its House district boundaries, though it was not clear whether Republicans had enough votes in the legislature to pass a new map.

By Julie Bosman, Nick Corasaniti and Mitch Smith

Gov. Gavin Newsom standing on a stage in a dark sport coat and white shirt. He is standing in front of two American flags and two flags of the state of California.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Newsom Says He Will Consider a 2028 Presidential Run After the Midterms

The California governor acknowledged in an interview Sunday on CBS that he would give the question serious thought after the 2026 elections.

By Sonia A. Rao

Two women hold cardboard boxes as a third holds the open door of a vehicle,

Lawren Simmons for The New York Times

Food Banks Brace for Overwhelming Demand as SNAP Cutoff Looms

Growing need and decreased resources are squeezing the charitable food system beyond its capacity, leaders say.

By Chris Hippensteel

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