Former Trump Adviser Steve Bannon Laying Groundwork for Possible 2028 Presidential Bid

(AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Former adviser to President Donald Trump, Steve Bannon, is preparing the groundwork for a potential run for president in 2028, according to a report published Saturday by Axios.

Axios, citing anonymous sources familiar with the matter, reported that Bannon has begun taking early steps consistent with a presidential campaign, including setting up a political action committee and speaking with allies about potential staffing. The outlet also noted that Bannon appeared last year at events hosted by the Colorado and Georgia Republican parties, which it described as an effort to build relationships with state-level organizers who play influential roles in the primary process.

Despite those activities, Axios reported that Bannon has told associates that his primary goal is not necessarily to win the presidency, but to influence the direction of the Republican Party. According to the report, Bannon aims to pressure GOP candidates to adopt an “America First” agenda that emphasizes non-interventionist foreign policy, economic populism, and opposition to major technology companies.

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz told Axios that a Bannon-led campaign would combine “the foreign policy of Rand Paul with the tax policy of Elizabeth Warren.”

Sources close to Bannon told Axios they envision a nontraditional campaign model, potentially operating out of Bannon’s Capitol Hill podcast studio and avoiding traditional rallies in early primary states such as Iowa and New Hampshire.

Bannon, however, publicly dismissed the report. In comments to Axios, he denied planning a presidential run, saying his focus remains on supporting Trump for another term in office, despite the Constitution’s two-term limit.

“We don’t have a country if we don’t get every ounce of fight and energy from President Trump,” Bannon said, arguing that the 22nd Amendment could be interpreted in a way that allows Trump to seek a third term.

Bannon also said he is working with former Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz on a forthcoming book titled Could President Trump Constitutionally Serve a Third Term?, scheduled for release in March.

Trump, who turns 80 on June 14, was the oldest person ever inaugurated as president. One source quoted by Axios said that if Trump ultimately does not run again, Bannon would “reluctantly say he must carry the mantle,” suggesting his own candidacy could follow.

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

3 Responses

  1. Vance and Rubio are currently the leading Republican possibilities for 2028, and having a nut case MAGA person running will make them look all the better. The only danger is that there will be so many “normal” Republicans in including sane MAGA people running that they will split the vote leading to Bannon getting the nomination (cf: how Trump won in 2016).

  2. Bannon said, arguing that the 22nd Amendment could be interpreted in a way that allows Trump to seek a third term.

    There is no such way. Trump is absolutely barred from a third term, and he knows it very well and has no intention of attempting it. He just has lots of fun talking about it and making Democrat heads explode.

    No, he can’t run for vice president. The constitution explicitly says that anyone ineligible for president is also ineligible for vice president. That would include a vice president appointed under the 25th amendment.

    Trump could be elected speaker of the house, and then the president and vice president could resign, but that would only make him acting president, never president. He would have to be addressed as “Mr Acting President”, and that would rankle with him.

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