Essayer OR - Gratuit
A third Trump term sounds crazy, until you look closely
Evening Standard
|April 03, 2024
WHEN I saw the headline "Trump 2028" in American Conservative magazine, I thought it must be an April Fool's joke.
It was written by Peter Tonguette, surely a made-up, tongue-in-cheek name. In fact, the author is real and his admiration for Donald Trump knows no bounds. Although he told me his article was meant to be "provocative, cheeky and punchy", we were not simply being trolled.
Tonguette argued that "if a man who was once president returns, after a series of years, to stand again for the office and proves so popular as to earn a second non-consecutive term - as Trump seems bound to do - to deny him the right to run for a second consecutive term cuts against basic fair play.
"If, by 2028, voters feel Trump has done a poor job they can pick another candidate," he added, "but if they feel he has delivered on his promises, why should they be denied the freedom to choose him once more?" Whoa! Trump has not won the 2024 election yet.
It is possible he could lose to Joe Biden again. But let's face it, Trump would love being president for life. It irks him that under the 22nd amendment of the US constitution, he is barred from serving more than two terms.
Trump flirted with the idea of staying in power before the riot at the Capitol in January 2021. While hosting Chinese president Xi Jinping at his Mar-a-Lago compound in 2019, Trump said: "He's now president for life. President for life. No, he's great.
And look, he was able to do that. I think it's great. Maybe we'll have to give that a shot someday." His admiration for Xi is mutual, by the way. This week the New York Times revealed that covert Chinese social media accounts are posing as Make America Great Again fans and stoking division in the same way that Russian troll farms did in 2016.

Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition April 03, 2024 de Evening Standard.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Evening Standard
The London Standard
KOOLER THAN EVER: KIM GORDON ON PUNK, KURT AND SLOPAGANDA
In Sonic Youth she destroyed the rock mainstream alongside Nirvana, and now as a blisteringsolo artistshe's continuing the fight against autocrats, algorithmsandmusicthatsucks. By Martin Robinson
6 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Immortal beloved: London restaurants that should live forever
From the Ritz and Rules to Dorian and the Ledbury, David Ellis offers a guide to the capital's greatest gastronomic institutions — and the young guns that look set to join their ranks
11 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Move over Dr Google — Dr AI is creating a dangerous new wave of cyberchondriacs
In the early 2000s, the rise of Google became the bane of every doctor's life.
2 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
HONOR SWINTON BYRNE'S EDINBURGH
From the best speakeasies to fairytale river rapids and tales of witches aflame, the actor — who studied in the city — knows just where to go
4 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Pitzhanger Manor - Ealing Green, W5
John Soane was probably the most innovative British architect of his generation.
4 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Inside London City's quest for the big time
With immense investment and a strategy of ultra ambition, Michele Kang's Lionesses are going places - fast.
6 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
THE HIDDEN SCANDAL OF MODERN SLAVERY IN THE CAPITAL
Unpaid wages, 20-hour days, screaming abuse Hannah Wallace investigates the grim reality for migrant domestic workers, helpless inside the city’s grandest addresses.
7 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Album review: The same Harry Styles, only better. Techno, very occasionally
Harry Styles is not a risk-taker. While much is made of his androgynous style (the first man to wear a skirt on the cover of Vogue!) or mammoth stadium tours (30 nights at Madison Square Garden!), the biggest risk Styles has ever taken was in 2016, when he and his One Direction bandmates decided to go on indefinite hiatus, prompting the start of their solo careers.
2 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
Park wars: inside the battle to stop festivals taking over London's green spaces
For many residents, huge music events are an affront to local life, while others welcome the party vibe. Ruth Bloomfield investigates
6 mins
March 05, 2026
The London Standard
At the table: Good vibrations but too many bum notes
Chefs are sometimes asked the secret to their success.
3 mins
March 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
