None have served exactly 10 years.
a president can serve 8 years which is two full terms of 4 years each. but in south Korea they can only hold office for 5 years and in china they can hold office for 10 years
Depends on the office. Some are two years like the House or the Senate is 6 years. The President can only serve 2 terms of 4 years each, but the Vice President can serve two terms as Vice President and then go on to become President for 2 more terms.
The President can only serve up to two terms in office.
A US President is restricted to only two elected terms and up to two years of a President that person succeeded in office - for a total of 10 years maximum as President.
US presidents are elected to a four-year term. The maximum number of full terms that a president can serve is two. Presidents who took over for another president and have served more than two years can seek only one additional term.
Yes if they r the vice president and the president is removed from office for any reason he becomes the president if he serves 2 years or less he is able to serve for 2 terms as president but if he serves more than 2 years even one day he is only allowed to serve for one term
Grover Cleveland is the only US president to serve two non-consecutive (or two interrupted) terms of office.
They can serve only two terms.
The presidential term is for 48 months (4 years). A person can serve as president for only two consecutive terms.
I did some research and it turns out that they can only serve 2 years in office after their 8 years in office as a vice president. Totaling the years that they can serve at 10. So there would be no point to try to run for the presidency after 8 years in the vice presidency. This is a newer law that is not known by most including me until today.
There is no fixed length of the office of president world-wide; there are several nations that have presidents. In the United States the standard term is 4 years in length, starting January 20 following the November elections. A US president can currently be elected to 2 terms and no more. However, a US president could serve up to 10 years. If the next-in-line takes the office of president from a president who is no longer able to serve, and if the time left is less than half of the term, the new president may still run for and serve two terms of his/her own. If the time left is more than half of the former president's term, the new president can run for only one four-year term of his/her own.
Technically, there is no legal limit to the number of terms a person can serve as U. S. President. The 22nd Amendment to the U. S. Constitution limits the number of times a person can be elected U. S. President to two. Those who previously served at least two years as President or Acting President can be elected only once.