Donald Trump’s recent statements about serving a third term should not be taken at face value. Instead, they are likely a deliberate red herring, designed to dominate the news cycle and distract the public from the real threats to democracy that his administration and allies are pursuing. This is a classic Trump strategy; make an outrageous claim, provoke an intense reaction, and while everyone is busy debunking it, work quietly in the background to consolidate power.
The reality is that a third term is constitutionally impossible without an amendment, which would require overwhelming congressional and state-level support; something Trump does not have. So why bring it up? Because it forces Democrats, legal scholars, and the media to focus on an imaginary crisis rather than the real one. While everyone is busy arguing about whether he “means it” or if there’s a legal loophole he could exploit, the actual threats to democracy, attacks on voting rights, the erosion of institutional checks and balances, and the installation of loyalists in key positions, go largely unchecked.

We’ve seen this playbook before. Throughout his first presidency, Trump used inflammatory rhetoric to create chaos and dominate media coverage, distracting from the structural changes his administration was making behind the scenes. His lies about a “stolen election” consumed public discourse, but the real story was the groundwork being laid for legal challenges, voter suppression laws, and, ultimately, the violent January 6th insurrection. His latest comments about a third term could serve a similar function, keeping his base engaged and enraged while drawing attention away from his administration’s more immediate moves.
The most dangerous aspect of this tactic is that it works. Every time Trump makes an outrageous claim, it forces his opponents to play defense, scrambling to explain why his idea is unconstitutional or unworkable. Meanwhile, his supporters rally around him, buying into the narrative that he is the only one who can “save” the country. This shift in focus allows him to continue his real mission; undermining democratic institutions to ensure his grip on power extends far beyond 2029, even if he never officially serves a third term.
Democrats and the media must recognize this strategy for what it is. Instead of getting caught up in the spectacle, they must stay laser-focused on what Trump is actually doing. The real story isn’t whether he can serve a third term, it’s how he is working right now to weaken democracy so that he won’t have to leave power in the first place.