NO - He could not for he died in office during his first term.
No one was re-elected in 1920. Republican Warren Harding took the election, replacing Democrat Woodrow Wilson.
Calvin Coolidge was elected to the presidency once through a full election in 1924. He initially became president in 1923 after the death of Warren G. Harding and completed Harding's term, but he did not win election for a second full term after 1924, as he chose not to seek re-election in 1928.
yes Abraham Lincoln did run for the re-election
It is people, and not branches of government, who run for re-election.
In 1917, Woodrow Wilson was still the president. In fact, he was re-elected and served a second term. The United States got a new president after that: there was an election in 1920, and Warren G. Harding won.
Yes, there have been instances in which an incumbent president has chosen not to run for re-election.
He decided not to run for re-election because he said he wanted to only work at getting the troops out of Vietnam
No, a president cannot run for re-election after serving two terms in office, regardless of any hiatus in between.
No, Congressmen do not run for re-election every year. Members of the House of Representatives serve two-year terms, so they must run for re-election every two years. Senators serve six-year terms, so they only run for re-election every six years.
How can you run for RE-election when you were never Elected, in the first place, for the office you are holding. You should be considered as running for Election not Re-election. Yet historical accounts always seem to indicate that Gerald Ford ran for Re-election not, in fact, for Election.
he promised to not run for re-election
Yes, he ran for re-election.