Third Term or Fifth: Nothing Would Change
Even if Donald Trump floated a third term—or five more—his governance would not improve. Why? Because outcomes do not rely on persistence alone, but on the ability to design coherent policies, build consensus, and execute effectively. What we have seen so far shows the real limit of his project: a repertoire on repeat, formulas that do not evolve, and a style of communication aimed at agitation rather than solution.
Five years of effective power should be enough to deliver a substantive shift in the most sensitive areas, and that did not happen. On immigration, the message remained rigid without producing a durable architecture for border management, administrative modernization, or sustainable legislative agreements. Politically, confrontation prevailed over negotiation; institutionally, the emphasis was on stressing the limits rather than governing with stability. The balance sheet: high polarization and scarce structural reforms.
That is why talk of extending terms does not resolve the underlying doubts: repeating the same leadership with the same tools only reproduces the same results. Democracies are not strengthened by piling up terms, but by course correction, by raising the intellectual level of public debate, and by delivering measurable policies. Without changes in method, team, and priorities, the promise of “more time” is little more than a slogan without tangible improvement.











