Yes.
Yes. According to Article 57 of the Constitution, a President is eligible for re-election to that office
Yes. According to Article 57 of the Constitution, a President is eligible for re-election to that office
a Lame Duck. or A still-in-office-president.
It is people, and not branches of government, who run for re-election.
In the 2020 election, Joe Biden is running as the Democratic candidate for president, not Obama. Obama served as the 44th president of the United States from 2009 to 2017 and is no longer eligible for re-election.
Yes, provided that he / she becomes President more than two years into the initial term. The twenty second amendment to the US Constitution stipulates that a President is not eligible for re-election if they have served more than six years in office. Gerald Ford, had he been elected in 1976, would have been eligible for re-election in 1980, for instance. No President has served more than two terms since the adoption of the amendment, however.
Yes, there have been instances in which an incumbent president has chosen not to run for re-election.
he goes into election and wins
The President of India is available for re-ecection. An Indian president holds office for five years for each term. He or she are then able to be re-elected.
No, a president cannot run for re-election after serving two terms in office, regardless of any hiatus in between.
James Polk was the first president who did not seek re-election after serving his first term in office. Other presidents before him did not serve two terms, but they sought re-election and failed to get it.
He would be old enough. If he met the other requirements he would be eligible.