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No, according to the 22nd Amendment to the United States Constitution, a president can only serve a maximum of two terms, whether consecutive or not.
The Governor in Kansas serves a four-year term and is limited to two consecutive terms in office, after which they must wait one term before being eligible to run again.
In the Philippines, a mayor can serve a maximum of three consecutive terms, with each term lasting three years. After serving three consecutive terms, a mayor must vacate the position for at least one term before being eligible to run again. However, there is no limit on the total number of non-consecutive terms a mayor can serve throughout their lifetime.
There is no limit to the total number of four-year terms someone may serve as Governor of Louisiana, but he/she may not serve more than two of any three consecutive terms.
I suppose it would depend on the city, but surely many cities do not have any term limits and mayors have been known to serve for many terms.
The Members of the House of Representatives shall be elected for a term of three years, and shall serve for no more than three consecutive terms.
Odyssey Ware;FALSE
Odyssey Ware;FALSE
Hayes didn't even serve 2 terms, let alone 3. He did not seek re-election after his first term. The only president to have served 3 terms is Franklin Roosevelt (he was elected to four terms, but died a short time into the fourth).
The first British prime minister to serve three consecutive terms in the 20th century was Sir Winston Churchill. He held office from 1940 to 1945 during World War II and then again from 1951 to 1955. His leadership during the war and subsequent terms solidified his place in British political history.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first president to serve three terms.
Yes, he served three consecutive terms and was elected to a fourth term but died during the first year of his fourth term.