Trump’s current term cannot be extended by three years
- This article is more than one year old.
- Published on February 4, 2020 at 22:31
- Updated on February 4, 2020 at 23:20
- 3 min read
- By AFP USA, Manon JACOB,
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The article -- linked to in posts here and here -- is headlined: “Supreme Court Can Extend Trump’s Term By Up To 3 Years If He’s Acquitted In The Senate.”
“Is this possible?” one of the posts on a pro-Trump Facebook page says.
Comments on the post indicate that some readers believe it is in fact possible, though others identified the article as satire.
“Now this is great news!” wrote one person, while another commented: “Fabulous. I would be happy if he remained President indefinitely.”
The article says that if Trump is acquitted by the Senate -- where he is currently on trial on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress -- his term could be extended until 2023 unless the top US court struck down a 1970s-era law allowing this to happen.
It was published on dailyworldupdate.us, a website whose banner says the site provides “Satire for Flat Earthers, Trumpsters, and Y’all Qaeda.”
Dailyworldupdate.us is part of the “America’s Last Line of Defense” network of websites, which was founded by Christopher Blair, a resident of the US state of Maine.
Articles on Blair’s sites make outrageous claims written as fact, albeit with clear indications they are not real.
The articles are nonetheless shared in droves by people who apparently believe they are true amid a hyper-partisan American political environment.
Legal experts also told AFP by email that Trump’s current term cannot be extended.
“This is absolutely, 100 percent wrong. The Supreme Court cannot in any way, under any circumstances or for any reason, grant any president any sort of ‘extension’ of their term in office,” said Elizabeth Wydra, the president of the Constitutional Accountability Center.
It “is categorically untrue and there is no basis in the text or interpretive history of the Constitution to support that claim,” said Fernando Laguarda, Director of the Program on Law & Government at American University’s Washington College of Law.
The US president has repeatedly joked about remaining in office past the constitutionally-mandated two-term limit during campaign rallies and official speeches, as well as on Twitter.
Claims that Trump’s acquittal by the Senate would nullify his first term and allow him to serve two more have also circulated online in recent months, including here and here.
But legal experts said the only way Trump could stand for more than two terms would be through an amendment to the Constitution.
“The Constitution forbids any person to be elected more than twice to the office of president. Frankly, it’s deeply worrisome that some Trump supporters are even contemplating such an unconstitutional, anti-democratic, un-American idea,” Wydra said.
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