Elon Musk, Donald Trump
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Ryan Monarch, a professor of economics at Syracuse University, told Newsweek on Thursday that Tesla has an advantage over its competitors but won't go completely unscathed by the tariffs.
From Newsweek
April 1st brought a brief reprieve—and not because of jokes.
From The Economist
Musk and his affiliated groups sunk $21 million into flipping the Wisconsin Supreme Court to conservative control, only to see his candidate defeated by 10 percentage points on Tuesday.
From Houston Chronicle
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President Donald Trump recently teased the possibility of serving a third term in office. PolitiFact asked constitutional law experts what they thought
Trump says 'there are methods' to seek third term despite term limits and 22nd amendment. How old is Trump? Here's how Trump could get a third term
Talk of a third term flatters Trump’s ego, rankles liberals, and redirects the 2028 conversation away from viewing Vance as the heir apparent. And if the president does bow to the reality that he can’t keep running, it could be his most dedicated loyalist, the one who insisted Trump should run again, who benefits.
Tom Emmer, the No. 3 Republican in the U.S. House, held his first town hall of the year Wednesday night. The town hall came as activists across the state and in his district have been urging Emmer and Minnesota’s three other Republicans in Congress to hold an in-person town hall to discuss President Donald Trump’s agenda and tech billionaire Elon Musk’s influence in the administration.
President Donald Trump has dominated headlines this week for a number of reasons, but one of the most eye-catching has been his admitted desire for a third term. It’s not possible, per the Constitution, but Trump seems to think it is.
On Sunday, Trump told NBC News that he was “not joking” about trying to serve a third term in the White House. “There are methods which you could do it," Trump told NBC’s Kristen Welker. Trump is in his second term as president and would be 82 when his current term ends in 2029.
President Donald Trump said he's "not joking" about a possible third term in a new interview with NBC News."There are methods which you could do it," the president said.Newsweek reached out to the White House for comment on Sunday.
The president recently told NBC News he was "not joking" about considering what would be an unconstitutional third term in office.
Vice President JD Vance could help the president get around the United States Constitution, a law professor told Newsweek.
President Donald Trump said on Sunday he was not joking about seeking a third term but did not explain how he would get around the U.S. Constitution's prohibition against anyone serving more than two terms as president.
Here's what today's polls say about President Donald Trump's current approval rating amid his 'not joking' comments about seeking a third term