George Washington said something similar to that. in 1796 when he was asked to serve for a third term. Other presidents repeated this idea later.
Barack Obama made the statement that "it is not right for a president to run for more than two terms" during an interview in 2014, reaffirming the longstanding tradition of presidential term limits set by the Twenty-Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.
More than likely he meant: "I am vice president." He was vice president under George Washington for both of Washington's terms before becoming the second president.
Yes, after his four re-elections Congress passed a law that said you could not serve more than two terms.
Spencer Kimbell, President of the Morman church.
You are probably asking about "two terms in office." In America, a president is only allowed to be elected twice. Each presidential term is 4 years. So, a president, if he is elected two times, is said to be a two-term president, or it is said he served "two terms in office." (The word "office" refers to the Office of the Presidency.)
The same guy who said, "I'd rather be right than President." OK, probably more than one said that. Henry Clay comes to mind.
Henry Clay
The length of Presidential and Vice Presidential terms is set in Article II, Section 1, Clause 1.
How to said arleen is the president in france
One answer said "If he was VP and finishes up at POTUS". Well that is only one way. What if He/she were Speaker of the House and became POTUS because VP could not serve as President? Then the speaker ran for POTUS for 2 terms afterwards? BTW the only way they can run for 2 terms is they could not serve as President for 24 or more months as POTUS. If they served 23 months and 25 days then yep they can run for 2 more terms. Your welcome.
the 22nd
The President can serve up to two consecutive terms of six years each.
unanswered question.