No, US Presidents can only serve 2 terms, even if unconsecutively.
He is the only president to have been elected for two nonconsecutive terms: 1885 and 1893.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was our only four-term president.
US Presidents have always been elected for a four year period
The current President, Barack Obama, is the first black President. He was elected to two terms. He was formerly a Senator in Illinois.
if you mean how many terms they can serve, they can only serve two four-year terms at once but they can run again after another president has been elected.
John Adams: 2 full terms as V. P.; elected President onceThomas Jefferson: 1 full term as V. P.; elected President twiceMartin Van Buren: 1 full term as V. P.; elected President onceRichard Nixon: 2 full terms as V. P.; elected President twiceGeorge H. W. Bush: 2 full terms as V. P.; elected President onceRichard Nixon is the only person to have been elected U. S. Vice President twice and elected U. S. President twice. However, to date, nobody has yet served two full terms as Vice President AND two full terms as President.
FDR was elected to 4 terms (1932, 1936, 1940, and 1944) then died in April 1945.No president before him had been elected to more than 2 terms and after him the 22nd Amendment limited future presidents to no more than 2 terms.
Only one: Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Presidents are elected to 4 year terms, with a maximum serving time of 10 years. Clinton's 2 terms have ended, and new presidents have since been elected.
The 22nd Amendment set term limits for the president. The amendment was prompted by the fact that President Roosevelt had been elected to four terms and could have been elected to more had he not died in office. Some felt President Washington had set the number of terms that were intended by the founding fathers when he declined to run for a third term.