The crowd wasn’t subtle.
“Four more years!” they chanted — loud, proud, and relentless — as President Donald J. Trump stood at a White House Hanukkah reception this week, basking in the kind of enthusiasm only Trump can summon.
As laughter filled the room, Trump casually dropped a bombshell: one of his biggest supporters might be ready to bankroll something the political class insists is “impossible.” “She said think about it, I’ll give you another $250 million!” Trump quipped, sending the room into hysterics.
From the crowd, billionaire donor Miriam Adelson could be heard responding plainly: “I will give.”
Welcome to Trump World — where nothing is off-limits, not even a third term.
Adelson, widow of legendary Israeli-American billionaire Sheldon Adelson, is no stranger to backing conservative causes. She poured more than $100 million into Trump’s last election cycle and remains one of his most loyal allies. And according to those in the room, she’s dead serious.
At the reception, Adelson openly mused about Trump staying in power beyond the traditional eight years — an idea that sent liberals clutching their pocket Constitutions. She even cornered Trump’s former impeachment attorney, Alan Dershowitz, earlier with the burning question.
“Is this real? Oh, my God, I hope this can happen,” she asked him.
Dershowitz, never one to shy away from controversy, has already gone public with his thoughts. In fact, he’s written an entire book titled Could President Trump Constitutionally Serve a Third Term? The famed Harvard law professor admits the issue isn’t as settled as the media pretends.
“I said it’s not clear if a president can become a third term president and it’s not clear if it’s permissible,” Dershowitz told The Wall Street Journal.
He even gave Trump a copy of the book. According to Dershowitz, Trump was intrigued — not plotting.
“He found it interesting as an intellectual issue,” the lawyer said, adding, “Do I think he’s going to run for a third term? No, I don’t think he will run for a third term.”
But enthusiasm in the room told a different story.
Trump briefly scanned the crowd looking for Dershowitz as Adelson urged him on, declaring: “I met Alan Dershowitz and he said the legal thing about four more years and I said, ‘Alan, I agree with you.’ So, we can do it. Think about it!”
The White House isn’t committing either way — but they aren’t exactly shutting the door. Spokesperson Abigail Jackson pointed to Trump’s record instead of legal hypotheticals.
“There has never been an Administration that has accomplished as much in less than one year than the Trump Administration,” she told Axios.“The American people would be lucky to have President Trump in office for even longer.”
Trump, now 79, has addressed the third-term chatter before — sometimes cooling it down, sometimes lighting the fuse.













It would be a beautiful thing if it could happen, or it could backfire and get another Biden, Obama, or Clinton elected.