News | National
3 Jul 2025 21:03
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Trump is not like other presidents – but can he beat the ‘second term curse’ that haunts the White House?

    According to myth, the ghost of George Washington cursed anyone serving more than four years. But a nonconsecutive second term is different – as is Donald Trump.

    Garritt C. Van Dyk, Senior Lecturer in History, University of Waikato
    The Conversation


    While he likes to provoke opponents with the possibility of serving a third term, Donald Trump faces a more immediate historical burden that has plagued so many presidents: the “second term curse”.

    Twenty-one US presidents have served second terms, but none has reached the same level of success they achieved in their first.

    Second term performances have ranged from the lacklustre and uninspiring to the disastrous and deadly. Voter dissatisfaction and frustration, presidential fatigue and a lack of sustainable vision for the future are all explanations.

    But Trump doesn’t quite fit the mould. Only one other president, Grover Cleveland in the late 19th century, has served a second nonconsecutive term, making Trump 2.0 difficult to measure against other second-term leaders.

    Trump will certainly be hoping history doesn’t repeat Cleveland’s second-term curse. Shortly after taking office he imposed 50% tariffs, triggering global market volatility that culminated in the “Panic of 1893”.

    At the time, this was the worst depression in US history: 19% unemployment, a run on gold from the US Treasury, a stock market crash and widespread poverty.

    More than a century on, Trump’s “move fast and break things” approach in a nonconsecutive second term might appeal to voters demanding action above all else. But he risks being drawn into areas he campaigned against.

    So far, he has gone from fighting a trade war and a culture war to contemplating a shooting war in the Middle East. His “big beautiful bill” will add trillions to the national debt and potentially force poorer voters – including many Republicans – off Medicaid.

    Whether his radical approach will defy or conform to the second term curse seems very much an open question.

    No kings

    The two-term limit was enacted by the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution in 1951. Without a maximum term, it was feared, an authoritarian could try to take control for life – like a king (hence the recent “No Kings” protests in the US).

    George Washington, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson all declined to serve a third term. Jefferson was suspicious of any president who would try to be re-elected a third time, writing:

    should a President consent to be a candidate for a 3d. election, I trust he would be rejected on this demonstration of ambitious views.

    There is a myth that after Franklin Delano Roosevelt broke the de facto limit of two terms set by the early presidents, the ghost of George Washington placed a curse on anyone serving more than four years.

    At best, second-term presidencies have been tepid compared to the achievements in the previous four years. After the second world war, some two-term presidents (Eisenhower, Reagan and Obama) started out strong but faltered after reelection.

    Eisenhower extricated the US from the Korean War in his first term, but faced domestic backlash and race riots in his second. He had to send 500 paratroopers to escort nine Black high school students in Little Rock, Arkansas, to enforce a federal desegregation order.

    Reagan made significant tax and spending cuts, and saw the Soviet Union crumble in term one. But the Iran-Contra scandal and watered down tax reform defined term two.

    Obama started strongly, introducing health care reform and uniting the Democratic voter base. After reelection, however, the Democrats lost the House, the Senate, a Supreme Court nomination, and faced scandals over the Snowden security leaks and Internal Revenue Service targeting of conservative groups.

    Truly disastrous examples of second term presidencies include Abraham Lincoln (assassination), Woodrow Wilson (first world war, failure of the League of Nations, a stroke), Richard Nixon (Watergate, impeachment and resignation), and Bill Clinton (Lewinsky scandal and impeachment).

    Room for one more? Trump has joked about being added to Mount Rushmore. Shutterstock

    Monumental honours

    It may be too early to predict how Trump will feature in this pantheon of less-than-greatness. But his approval ratings recently hit an all-time low as Americans reacted to the bombing of Iran and deployment of troops in Los Angeles.

    A recent YouGov poll showed voters giving negative approval ratings for his handling of inflation, jobs, immigration, national security and foreign policy. While there has been plenty of action, it may be the levels of uncertainty, drastic change and market volatility are more extreme than some bargained for.

    An uncooperative Congress or opposition from the judiciary can be obstacles to successful second terms. But Trump has used executive orders, on the grounds of confronting “national emergencies”, to bypass normal checks and balances.

    As well, favourable rulings by the Supreme Court have edged closer to expanding the boundaries of executive power. But they have not yet supported Trump’s claim from his first term that “I have an Article 2, where I have the right to do whatever I want as President”.

    Some supporters say Trump deserves a Nobel Peace Prize. And he was only half joking when he asked if there is room for one more face on Mount Rushmore. But such monumental honours may only amount to speculation unless Trump’s radical approach and redefinition of executive power defy the second-term curse.

    The Conversation

    Garritt C. Van Dyk has received funding from the Getty Research Institute.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     03 Jul: Northland police are investigating a spate of suspicious fires in the past seven months
     03 Jul: Police have charged a man with manslaughter over a fatal Southland crash in February
     03 Jul: A woman's been charged with interfering with human remains - over a newborn's body found in an Auckland wheelie bin on Tuesday
     03 Jul: Thumbs up: good or passive aggressive? How emojis became the most confusing kind of online language
     03 Jul: Coach Scott Robertson is confident he's nailing a number of objectives in naming the first All Blacks side of the year
     03 Jul: Drivers converging on a 60-metre roundabout being built at the intersection of State Highway One and 29 in central Waikato, can do it faster
     03 Jul: A person's died after a truck crash in Tasman District's Wairoa Valley - about 9.40 this morning
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Rieko Ioane will start on the wing for the All Blacks for the first time in three and a half years when the test season gets underway against France on Saturday night More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Consumer spending's continuing to pick up More...



     Today's News

    Law and Order:
    Bryan Kohberger killed four Idaho college students — we may never find out why 20:37

    Entertainment:
    Abby Elliott has described getting fired from Saturday Night Live was her "worst" fear come true 20:36

    Entertainment:
    Raven-Symoné and her wife sleep in separate bedrooms 20:06

    Accident and Emergency:
    Northland police are investigating a spate of suspicious fires in the past seven months 19:37

    Entertainment:
    Rita Ora changed her life after seeking advice from a fortune teller 19:36

    Entertainment:
    Savannah Chrisley cried when Donald Trump was elected US President as it gave her hope her parents would be released from prison 19:06

    Health & Safety:
    Kiwi scientists say their research could allow early detection of dementia 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Billy Joel was still dating Elle Macpherson when he met Christie Brinkley 18:36

    Politics:
    A criminal defence lawyer isn't sure changing trespassing laws will significantly affect retail crime 18:07

    Entertainment:
    Elliot Page has debuted his first public relationship since his 2021 divorce 18:06


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd