Trump Says He Wouldn’t Run for President in 2028 if He Loses This Year

The former president, who is the Republican nominee for the third time, would be 82 on Election Day in 2028. That’s older than President Biden is now.

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Trump Says He Wouldn’t Run for President in 2028 if He Loses This Year | INFBusiness.com

Rally attendees await former President Donald J. Trump in Wilmington, N.C., last weekend.

Former President Donald J. Trump said in an interview broadcast on Sunday that he did not think he would run again in 2028 if he lost this year.

“No, I don’t,” Mr. Trump told a reporter from Sinclair Broadcast Group, a conservative conglomerate. “I think that that will be, that will be it. I don’t see that at all. I think that hopefully we’re going to be successful.”

Mr. Trump would be 82 on Election Day in 2028, older than President Biden is now. This year’s election is already his third consecutive time being the Republican nominee, after he won in 2016 and lost in 2020. In the modern party system, only Franklin Delano Roosevelt has ever received a major party’s nomination four times, though a handful have matched Mr. Trump with three.

It’s not the first time Mr. Trump has made such a comment. In 2020, he said if he lost to Mr. Biden, “You’ll never see me again.” At the time, the Biden campaign cut an ad with those remarks — and Vice President Kamala Harris’s campaign on Monday posted a video of Mr. Trump’s recent interview on social media, adding, “Let’s turn the page.”

The question of whether Mr. Trump would try again in four years if he lost is a step ahead of a more immediate matter: whether he would accept a loss this year to begin with.

When Mr. Trump lost in 2020, he refused to concede and led a sprawling attempt to overturn the result based on the lie that the election was stolen, culminating with his supporters’ storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He has refused to commit to accepting the results this year, either, and has pre-emptively sown doubt about them.

Maggie Astor covers politics for The New York Times, focusing on breaking news, policies, campaigns and how underrepresented or marginalized groups are affected by political systems. More about Maggie Astor

See more on: 2024 Elections: News, Polls and Analysis, Donald Trump, President Joe Biden

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Source: nytimes.com

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