After FDR's presidency (4 terms) end 1945, the max term limit was changed to two.
A person can be elected president at most two times.
A president may be re-elected two consecutive times. Just like in the USA.
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 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.
There currently is no restriction on how many times a congressman can be re-elected.
As long as he or she is elected to be a representative. There is no limit to how many terms a House of Representative member may be elected.
There are no legal restriction on how many times a person can be elected to these positions.
There are no legal restrictions on the number of times a congressman can be re-elected.
8
2 times. (4 year terms; only 8 years all together.) A president may only be elected twice to the office of president, although a former president may have other positions in government after he is out of office.
A president can be elected for two terms of four years. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was president of the United States for twelve years, because the country didn't want to elect a new president during the war and the Great Depression of 1929.
Hamilton argues that by limiting how many time someone can be elected President the Untied States would lack the wisdom of his butt they had put a third one.