Democratic lawmakers are edging into territory once considered unthinkable: openly mulling the 25th Amendment in response to Trump’s renewed insistence that the United States must acquire Greenland. His threats of tariffs against European partners if Denmark refuses to negotiate have rattled NATO capitals and revived fears of a manufactured diplomatic crisis, all in the name of a controversial geopolitical prize.
Figures like Representative Maxine Waters and Senator Ed Markey are not merely criticizing policy; they are questioning presidential capacity itself. The 25th Amendment, designed for moments of clear incapacity, suddenly sits in the center of a partisan storm, its grave constitutional power weighed against escalating anxiety over Trump’s judgment. Whether it is ever invoked or not, the fact that serious lawmakers are discussing it in public marks a new and volatile phase in America’s struggle over leadership, stability, and the outer limits of presidential behavior.