No, Trump can't cancel the 2028 election. But he could still weaken democracy.
President-elect Donald Trump is now once again President Donald Trump, and in the roughly 24 hours since he has taken office, he has very publicly claimed for himself an extraordinary amount of executive power: He issued more executive orders on Day 1 than any previous president, including one to end birthright citizenship (a right guaranteed in the Constitution) and one blocking the enforcement of a ban on the video streaming app TikTok that was passed by Congress and upheld by the Supreme Court. He also pardoned rioters who breached the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Even before these latest actions, a significant number of Americans were worried about the U.S. becoming less of a democracy and more of an authoritarian state under Trump's second term. A Dec. 3-5 poll from Marist College found that 73 percent of adults thought there was a serious threat to the future of our democracy. And according to a Public Religion Research Institute poll from last August-September, 49 percent of Americans thought there was a real danger that Trump would use the presidency to become a dictator.
But when people think of Trump becoming a dictator, they're probably thinking of something akin to him going on TV one day and declaring himself president for life. (For instance, host Nikki Glaser memorably joked at the Golden Globes about there not being a next election.) There are a myriad of legal and practical reasons why that is extremely unlikely to happen but that doesn't mean he won't pose a threat to democracy. Political scientists who have studied the erosion of democracy in other countries emphasize that it's a gradual, even subtle process that often leaves the trappings of democracy in place. In fact, those experts say, U.S. democracy was already eroded under Trump's first term and the most serious danger is that his second will see more of the same.
Let's get one thing out of the way: No, Trump cannot run for a third term or cancel the 2028 election. The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution says, "No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice," and even if Trump tries to defy that, he would almost certainly be universally rebuffed by the courts and election officials. Even Trump's allies, such as Attorney General nominee Pam Bondi, have flatly stated that he cannot run for president again unless the Constitution is amended. (And it won't be. Constitutional amendments must pass the Senate and House with two-thirds majorities which Republicans don't have and be ratified by three-fourths of state legislatures. Republicans control the legislatures in just 29 of the 50 states, including Nebraska's nonpartisan legislature.)
https://abcnews.go.com/538/trump-cancel-2028-election-weaken-democracy/story?id=117807079

synni
(303 posts)He can do whatever he wants, because Congress won't stop him.
J_William_Ryan
(2,681 posts)Ultimately, its up to the people democracys most dangerous flaw and weakness.
If again guided by their fear, ignorance, and stupidity, their racism, bigotry, misogyny, and hate, as they were in 2024 when voting for Trump, then yes, another fascist thug like Trump is possible, along with the harm, bad governance, and decay of liberty associated with another fascist thug like Trump.
LaMouffette
(2,488 posts)AGAIN!
I am convinced that he hacked the voting machines in the swing states. There is no way in hell that Rump not only won, but won the popular vote.
Plus, Musk has just infiltrated the National Archives, which oversees the workings of the Electoral College during the presidential election. We are so screwed unless both Rump and Musk are run out of Washington.