Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) said Sunday that President Trump was joking when he floated running for a third term, adding he could not seek to change the Constitution without the consent of voters.
The U.S. Constitution prevents Donald Trump from running for a third term, but that hasn’t stopped him from toying with the idea. Trump raised the topic at a Black History Month event Thursday.
President Donald Trump joked about a potential third term amid supporters chanting “four more years” – despite the U.S. constitution barring that from happening. Or could it? Here’s what ...
Trump becomes the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl. President Donald Trump's second administration continued its swift recasting of the federal government, prompting pushback from ...
Confidence among U.S. consumers weakened for a second-straight month, reflecting retreating optimism of both current and future conditions at the start of President Trump’s second term and ...
The term "woke" used to have a different meaning. It was first used by Pan-African activist Marcus Garvey as early as 1923. "Woke" was meant to acknowledge the struggles of African Americans ...
In the first week of Donald Trump’s second term, the Department of Homeland ... Sec_Noem joined ICE officials in New York for a series of pre-dawn raids targeting undocumented migrants with ...
also demonstrates careful thought about how to better execute during a second term. When Trump signed a series of executive orders along many fronts on January 20 and 21, it seemed to prove that ...
DORAL, Fla. — President Donald Trump publicly mused about running for a third term Monday in remarks that House Republicans in the room saw as a joke — but one that Trump keeps repeating.