With time running out before the government shutdown began nearly four weeks ago, Donald Trump half-heartedly hosted a meeting in the Oval Office with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders from the House and Senate. To the surprise of no one, the discussion proved pointless, and the shutdown soon followed.
But during that ill-fated conversation, something weird happened: Participants noticed that red hats suddenly appeared on the president’s desk. The text on the hats read “Trump 2028.”
In the immediate aftermath, the president started publishing assorted images to his social media platform in apparent celebration of the hats and their message. In one especially jarring instance, the Republican posted an AI-generated video of Trump tossing a “Trump 2028” cap onto the head of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
All of this was ridiculous, of course, but it was also a reminder that the president apparently likes to stoke the underlying rhetorical fire from time to time, as if another reelection bid were still a possibility for him — the Constitution be damned.
A month later, he’s leaning into the idea anew. Reuters reported:
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday ruled out running for vice president in the 2028 election but declined to definitively say he would not seek a third term, keeping alive speculation about how he might seek to extend his time in office.
The Republican called the idea of running for vice president “too cute,” adding that voters “wouldn’t like that,” but he was far less definitive about the broader issue.
Trump on third term: I haven't really thought about it… but I have the best poll numbers I've ever had…. I would love to do itReporter: You’re not ruling it out?
— Acyn (@acyn.bsky.social) 2025-10-27T10:03:05.279Z
After claiming he hasn’t “thought about” the 2028 race, the Republican said he has “the best poll numbers” he’s ever had, concluding, “I would love to do it.”
His claim about not having thought about the issue was obviously silly — the hats were a dead giveaway — and the idea that his public standing is at an all-time high is demonstrably absurd.
But when Trump said he’d “love” to run again, that was believable.
In March, the president told NBC News that he was “not joking” about pursuing a possible third term. Two months later, he addressed U.S. troops stationed at the Al Udeid Air Base in Doha, Qatar, and declared, “As you know, we won three elections, OK? And some people want us to do a fourth. I don’t know, I’ll have to think about that.”








