The Twenty-second Amendment of the Constitution, limiting a US President to two elected terms, was ratified in 1951. This was done after Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to four successive terms as President, to prevent the Executive Branch from holding too much power.
Yes. Two 4-year terms only.
because somebody made the rule
No we can't because you can only be president twice and he was already president twice so we can't. So sorry.
yes twice but he only won the second time
frederick delano roosevelt
Grover is the only president to ever be a president twice.
Washington
Yes. Two 4-year terms only.
Grover Cleveland
Grover Cleveland did it!
yes, that would be legal The office of the U.S. Vice President has no bearing on the term limits of the President that were established in 1952 with the ratification of the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. If someone were to serve five full terms as Vice President, for example, he/she would still be eligible to be elected President twice. The only way that the term limits affect the Vice Presidency is that the Constitution requires that in order to run for Vice President, one must be eligible to be President. Therefore, someone who has been elected President twice could not run for Vice President. (There are some who believe that the presidential eligibility requirements for the vice presidency are only the age, citizenship and residency requirements and that having been elected President twice does not prohibit someone from running for Vice President. The opportunity to settle the debate in the courts has never come up.)
because somebody made the rule
Grover Cleveland
that's something that only you can answer. You learn about President Clinton, and then you decide that for yourself.
Only you can decide that.
He is the only president to have been elected for two nonconsecutive terms: 1885 and 1893.
It limits the president's terms by two. In other words, people can only be a president twice.