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A third term for Trump? Republicans were the ones who made the Constitution clear: No deal

2 10
yesterday

President Donald Trump is expressing a desire to run for a third term, but the 22nd Amendment of the Constitution limits presidents to two terms or 10 years in office.

When President Franklin D. Roosevelt died in 1945 after being elected to a fourth term, there was outrage in certain political quarters about him not observing the custom of two-term presidencies.

Consequently, Congress approved the 22nd Amendment in March 1947, which barred presidents from serving more than two terms and also no more than 10 years. The amendment was ratified by the states in 1951.

Who was in control of both houses of Congress in 1947? Well, golly gee, waddaya know?

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Those certain political quarters were the Republicans.

President Donald Trump yet again asserted his desire to run for a third term, not even three months into his catastrophic presidency that’s experiencing rapid unscheduled disassembly, in SpaceX parlance.

“A lot of people want me to do it. But, I mean, I basically tell them we have a long way to go, you know, it’s very early in the administration,” Trump told NBC News on Sunday.

Oh, he added, “I’m not joking.” The funny thing about Trump is that when he’s not compulsively lying, he’s saying precisely and truthfully what’s on his mind, like a 3-year-old child.

I suppose there are a lot of people who do want him to do it. Supplicatory GOP House members, like Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., who is one of the mental case outliers in that loony toon caucus, introduced a bill supporting........

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