A President can be elected to two terms. It does not matter if the terms are directly sequential (back to back) or not.
And it's probably good for the president to wear a tie too!
A person can be elected president at most two times.
A president may be re-elected two consecutive times. Just like in the USA.
President Sarkozy was elected on May 6, 2007. His term will end in may 2012.
yes i-- Being a governor has no direct relation to being elected president. (It is just one of many past experiences that votes may view favorably when they vote for president.)
Answer6 May 2007.NICHOLAS SARKOZY WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT ON MAY 6, OF 2007
In the United States, a president may be elected to serve no more than two terms.
Type your answer here... he will first have to be elected when the next election comes up, then if he is elected he can serve 4 years and run for one more term if he is re-elected.
He was elected on April 27, 1994 and sworn in as South Africa's first democratically elected president on May 10, 1994.
A person may be elected U. S. President a maximum of twice, unless he/she served at least two years of a term to which he/she was not elected, then only once.
The president of the US is elected for a 4-year term. Thereafter, the president may be re-elected for one additional term, for a maximum total of eight years.
The President may only be re-elected one time, to serve two consecutive terms. ------------ Well, technically, a person may serve as many as 10 years as President. This can be accomplished if the vice president must finish the term of another president and the time remaining is equal to but less than 2 more years. At that point the sitting president can be elected two more times. Could you claim they were re-elected twice? That's up to the observer.
The US president can be elected for two terms which would be 8 years total.