via Getty  

Donald Trump Finally Decides Whether He’ll Run For President Again

Trump’s third term plans unveiled.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Donald Trump just ended months of speculation with a five-word answer — and the political world is spinning.

advertisement

Trump’s presidencies profiled.

  via : Getty  

Trump first claimed the White House in 2016, defeating Hillary Clinton in one of the most shocking upsets in U.S. political history.

advertisement

  via Getty  

Trump first claimed the White House in 2016, defeating Hillary Clinton in one of the most shocking upsets in U.S. political history.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

By the time he left office in 2021, Trump had been impeached twice — and was still the face of the GOP.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Fast forward to 2024: Trump stunned critics again, defeating Vice President Kamala Harris in a fierce rematch campaign.

advertisement

  via Getty  

His return to the Oval Office marked the beginning of his second — and legally final — term as president.

advertisement

  via Getty  

According to the U.S. Constitution’s 22nd Amendment, no person can be elected president more than twice.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Still, that didn’t stop Trump from hinting — often — that he wasn’t done yet.

advertisement

Trump’s tease revealed.

  via Getty Images  

In January, he told supporters it would be the “greatest honor” to serve “once, twice… or even three or four times.”

advertisement

  via Getty Images  

He later said it was a joke for the “fake news media,” but not everyone was laughing — or convinced.

advertisement

  via Getty Images  

Then in March, he escalated the chatter in an NBC interview, claiming there were “methods” to run again — and added, “I’m not joking.”

advertisement

  via : Getty  

“A lot of people want me to do it,” he added. “But we have a long way to go.”

advertisement

The 2028 hype highlighted.

  via Getty Images  

Steve Bannon, Trump’s former White House strategist, turned the heat up during a podcast interview in May.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

On Apocalypse Now?, Bannon said, “There are methods. President Trump is going to be eligible. He’s going to run again. He will win again.”

advertisement

  via : Getty  

He painted a dramatic image: “On January 20, 2029, he’ll be in the White House signing executive orders.”

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Cue the conspiracy theories — and the endless headlines.

advertisement

What the constitution actually says unraveled.

  via Getty Image  

The 22nd Amendment is clear: “No person shall be elected to the office of the president more than twice.”

advertisement

  via : Getty  

It also bars anyone who served more than two years of another president’s term from running twice.

advertisement

  via Getty  

Legal scholars dismissed Bannon’s claims — but Trump’s base didn’t seem too worried about legal technicalities.

advertisement

  via Getty  

For them, the message was clear: If Trump says he can run, he will.

advertisement

Trump’s final answer on running again confirmed.

  via : Getty  

As Trump’s second term unfolds, his approval among Republicans remains sky-high.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

He brags constantly about record-setting votes: “I got the highest vote in Texas history,” he said this week.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

“A record that won’t be beaten… unless I run again,” he added with a smirk.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

It wasn’t the first time he’s dangled a hypothetical just long enough to ignite headlines.

advertisement

  via Getty Images  

Reporters pushed back, asking him: Are you running again? Will you try a third term?

advertisement

  via Getty  

On CNBC’s Squawk Box, Trump finally answered the question directly.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Laughing first, he paused before saying: “No, probably not.”

advertisement

  via : Getty  

“I’d like to run,” he added. “I have the best poll numbers I’ve ever had.”

advertisement

  via Getty Images  

Host Joe Kernen fact-checked him mid-sentence, clarifying that those numbers only apply to Republicans.

advertisement

  via : Getty  

Trump dismissed it: “I have a lot of fake polls out there.”

advertisement

What now for 2028?

  via Getty  

Despite the “probably not,” no one’s ruling out a last-minute twist — especially not from Trump.

advertisement

  via Getty  

After all, with Trump, the story’s never really over — it’s just waiting for the next twist.

advertisement