Congressman Buck McKeon served a total of 11 consecutive terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. He was first elected in 1992 and served until his retirement in 2015. During his tenure, he was involved in various committees, including serving as the Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.
Gerald Ford.
Two terms served but not right in a row.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
John Adams
President Clinton served two consecutive terms from 1993 to 2001
Edwin Edwards served four terms as Governor of Louisiana. However, they were not consecutive terms, spanning from 1972-1996. He also "served" 10 years in prison for corruption.
Yes, he served three consecutive terms and was elected to a fourth term but died during the first year of his fourth term.
FDR and the result was the term limits of 2 terms for a total of 8 years.
Because of the Constitution of the Republic of Texas, he was not eligible to serve two consecutive terms in office. He sat out from that position for three years and served in the interim as a State congressman and was then elected as the third President of the Republic of Texas.
No. The Constitution of the United States only allows for two consecutive terms of any one administration. That does not mean that a President who has served two consecutive terms cannot nominate and run for Presidency in the future.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
"The congressman, J Lewis, is a representative of Georgia. He serves the fifth congress district of Georgia. He has been in office since 1986, so over fifteen years. The average term length is four years so he has served over 4 terms."