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Including the election of 2016, of the 44 U. S. Presidents to date...
Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama are the first three consecutive U. S. Presidents to be elected more than once since Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroe.
Only Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected more than twice. His 4 time election wins were the beginnings of the US change in laws to limit one person to run for more than 2 terms.
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US: The legal limit is 10 years, not 8 as often but erroneously supposed. A President may serve as many as (but not more than) two years of a previous President's term and get elected to 2 full terms of his own. These restrictions are imposed by Section 1 of the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Other applicable areas of law concerning presidential succession are set forth in Article I, Section 1, Clause 6 of the Constitution, and by the 25th Amendment. Of the "recent" Vice Presidents who assumed the Presidency after the death or resignation of their predecessors, LBJ was allowed by law to be elected to 2 terms on his own (although he declined to run a second time after being elected in 1964), while Ford could only get elected to 1 more term on his own, as LBJ had served less than 2 years of JFK's term, while Ford had served more than 2 years of Nixon's second term.
There is no evidence that more than one had such children . (The one that may be guilty is Thomas Jefferson.)
Franklin D Roosevelt was the only president to serve more than two terms. He was elected for 4 terms. He took office on March 4, 1933 and continued until he died on April 12,1945, about three months into his 4th term. (After FDR, the constitution has been amended to prevent presidents from serving more than two terms. )
Term limits for presidents were imposed by the 22nd Amendment, which was ratified February 27, 1951. FDR was the only president to be elected more than two terms even without the 22nd Amendment (he was elected 4 times).
There were no Presidents of the United States before Washington. Under the Articles of Confederation, there were Presidents of Congress, but the two offices were very different. The President of the United States is the executive officer of the United States and wields a huge amount of power. The Presidents of Congress under the Articles of Confederation were very limited in their executive powers and essentially served solely as the presiding officers of Congress - more similar in their roles to today's President of the Senate than to the President of the United States itself. The Presidents of Congress after the Articles of Confederation were ratified were John Hanson , Elias Boudinot, Thomas Mifflin, Richard Henry Lee, John Hancock (elected but did not serve), Nathaniel Gorham, Arthur St. Clair, Cyrus Griffin.
The 22nd Amendment restricts presidents of the USA to be elected no more than two times.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected several times.
spell it right... and all the presidents served an equal amount of times. Total of 4 years if elected, and $ more if elected again. and many presidents ran for 8 years. (unless if assassinated)
US presidents can be elected to no more than two terms of four years each. They can not serve for more than 10 years and so can not be elected for a second term if they have already served more than 2 years of another president's term.
4 years or more only if they get re elected by the people of the United States Of America!!!!
Only one--Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected to four terms, though he died before he could complete his fourth. In response, the US Constitution was amended to prohibit future Presidents from being elected to more than two terms.
Yes, quite a few times actually. Matter of factly, more presidents weren't re-elected than the ones that were.
Some presidents were re-elected and so had more than one inauguration. Presidents who take office due to the death or resignation of the President do not have an inauguration ceremony unless they are later elected to a term of their own. Four presidents never had a inauguration ceremony. FDR had four.
more than enough dork
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected 4 times. After the 4th election inauguration he only lived for a couple of months. He was succeeded by his Vice President Harry S. Truman who served out most of his fourth term.
Virginia, Ohio,New York, and Massachusetts were each home to at least four Presidents. Texas and Illinois had three.
27 of the 44 US presidents served more than one term in office. 19 of these were elected to more than one term in office. The other 8 served out the term of a president who died in office and were re-elected for a second full term. Only one president served more than two terms, Franklin D Roosevelt, who served three full terms and was elected for a fourth but died in office before finishing that term.