Former and current U.S. President Donald Trump has told reporters aboard Air Force One that he is “not allowed” to run for a third term in 2028, effectively acknowledging what the U.S. Constitution already makes clear.
He said: “I have my highest poll numbers that I’ve ever had… I guess I’m not allowed to run, so we’ll see what happens.”
The legal foundation for Trump’s admission lies in the Twenty‑second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which states: “No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice.”
Trump has already served one term from 2017-2021 and began a second term in January this year, meaning a third elected term would run counter to that amendment. Legal analysts are virtually unanimous that there is no plausible legal route for him to be elected again.
Speculation about a possible 2028 run resurfaced when Trump displayed red “Trump 2028” hats in the Oval Office and allies such as Steve Bannon hinted at a “plan” to keep him in power.
Both the House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump himself this week acknowledged the constitutional limits. Johnson noted that amending the Constitution would take years, needing two-thirds of Congress and three-quarters of the states. Trump said the idea of his running again was “pretty clear” that he could not.
While the topic drew attention in Republican circles, the legal landscape remains firm: two elected terms only, and no clear viable loophole.

