I am not sure how important it was since there were not really very many presidents who would have served a third term even without Washington's precedent. Maybe Jefferson, Madison, Monroe or Theodore Roosevelt would have considered a third term had the precedent not been set against it. Jackson and Wilson might have if they were healthier when their second terms ended.
George Washington was the first president serving under a new Constitution that set up a radically new form of government. Everything he did as president set a precedent whether he wanted to or not. It was good that he was far more interested in making the system work than in any personal ambition and did not set any really bad precedents.
Washington refused to serve a third term as president thereby setting a precedent that was followed until FDR broke it in 1940.
George Washington served two terms.
George Washington was asked to run for a third term in office and declined because he felt we would wind up with a government like England with a King at the head of government. He therefore set a precedent of only two terms in office. This was followed until FDR and he was elected for four terms. Thereafter there was introduced an amendment to the constitution limiting presidential terms to two.
He served for two terms and probably could have been elected again but he refused to run again thinking that it would be a bad precedent if he should stay in office any longer.
George Washington, who served two terms between 1789 and 1797, did not seek a third term in office.
George Washington set the precedent of having a set number of terms. (2) By doing so, he believed that the "American Democracy" could surpass time. Since then only one President has ever surpassed this mark. Franklin Delano Roosevelt got elected to 4 terms (dying at the start of his 4th). After he died Congress added an Amendment to the Constitution limiting all President's to 2 terms max.
The most important precedent set by Washigton was that you could only be President for two terms. President's after Washington soon followed this precedent and now it has become a law
The most important precedent set by Washigton was that you could only be President for two terms. President's after Washington soon followed this precedent and now it has become a law
One of the first presidential precedents set by George Washington was the two-term limit. Despite being popular enough to be elected for a third term, Washington voluntarily stepped down after serving two terms, setting a precedent that subsequent presidents followed until it became an established rule with the 22nd Amendment in 1951.
One major precedent that George Washington set was a limited term as president. He could have been president for as long as he liked but he chose to leave the office after two terms. Only one president has served for more than two terms.
It was never four presidential terms. George Washington originally established the precedent when he resigned after two, but they only set a limit of two after FDR had four terms throughout WWII (he died in his fourth), and Congress later thought he became to king-like.
he made an agreement to serve two terms
George Washington served two terms.
he served two terms
George Washington set this precedent when he refused to run for a third term despite encouragement from many to do so.
Two. Washington was offered the kingship, but turned it down, and his precedent of only two presidential terms stood until Franklin Delano Roosevelt decided that he was more important than precedent. Pretty arrogant, that; FDR thought that in a nation of 100 million people, HE ALONE could lead the nation. He managed to extend depression to the point where it became the Great Depression, and his isolationist streak arguably invited Hitler and Tojo to take their chances at knocking America down a few pegs.
A major precedent was to serve only two terms as President. Washington could have run for a third term, but chose to step down instead.
*establish