A Republican group is hoping to rally support to change the Constitution to allow President Donald Trump to seek a third term.

The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was ratified in 1951 following the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was elected to four terms between 1933 and 1945. The two-term limit for presidents was introduced by Congress to prevent potential abuses of power.

  • petrescatraian
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    527 days ago

    @jarfil Not a single sane democracy allows for more than two terms (usually 8-10 years in total) during peace time. Russia is a special case and is undemocratic nevertheless. Trump getting a third term likely opens the road for the demise of the American democracy.

      • @[email protected]
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        426 days ago

        The difference is countries that vote for parties vs voting for an individual. I don’t know why anyone would think one person would have the best interests of the country at heart.

        • @[email protected]
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          226 days ago

          Not that I’m aware of? Technically the king/queen is head of state and that term is until death, can’t get much longer than that.

          • @[email protected]
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            126 days ago

            Technically the king/queen is head of state

            Technically, yes, but I was referring to the elected president/prime minister who is the head of the functional (as opposed to ceremonial) government.

      • Gorgritch_Umie_Killa
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        227 days ago

        Sanity doesn’t create our system,

        If the PM survives the voters, their Party dances them out, if the PM survives the Party, the PM resigns to spend more time with “family”, if the PM survives the “family”, the GG… Kerrtails.

        The PMs power at any given time can seem a bit Schroedinger’s cat.

        • @[email protected]
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          127 days ago

          It probably depends how much fractional power and money is behind the PM. John Howard was PM for a decade after all.

      • petrescatraian
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        127 days ago

        @spiffmeister hah! Are you able to be president for more than 2 consecutive terms in peace time?

        (I heard France doesn’t prohibit more than two terms either, but they have to not be consecutive)

        • @[email protected]
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          127 days ago

          Well Australia doesn’t have a president. But in theory there’s nothing stopping someone from being prime minister for infinite time, provided their party doesn’t stab them in the back or their party doesn’t lose the election.

          • Gorgritch_Umie_Killa
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            226 days ago

            Is Sue Lines, the President of the Senate, a joke to you! For interest, they also have no set term limits.

          • petrescatraian
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            126 days ago

            @spiffmeister oh, I see. Well, technically, a prime-minister is a different thing, so you’re right in this regard, but yeah, practically no one has been a prime minister for very long. It’s a bit of a complicated thing

            • @[email protected]
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              326 days ago

              Agreed that PM is different, they don’t weild the same power the US president does. But in terms of time, Robert Menzies was pm for a total of 18 years and John Howard was pm for 12, so you can be for a long time. Politics have just been much less stable in the last 20 years.