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  1. Dec 12, 2022 · In 2022, 142 respondents participated in the survey, up from 91 in 2017. Twenty-one presidents have been elected to a second term. A "second term" means winning two elections outright or being appointed to the first term, then winning reelection. Four presidents assumed office after the sitting president died.

    • John Adams. The first US president to fail to win re-election for a second term, was John Adams, who also served as the country’s first vice president. Read more: Can Trump run again in 2024?
    • John Quincy Adams. Another of the Adams family, John Quincy Adams, was unable to win re-election for a second term as US president. Mr Adams was the eldest son of the second US president, and was the sixth man to hold the position.
    • Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison. Martin Van Buren was the next president to fail to win re-election in 1840, but Grover Cleveland proved that a lost election does not stop you from getting your second term.
    • William Howard Taft. William Howard Taft was the next US president to fail to win re-election, 20 years later in 1912. Mr Taft, a Republican, is the only person in US history to have held both the position of president and chief justice of the United States.
    • George Washington. For anyone who knows anything about American history, George Washington is probably a pretty familiar name. Honestly, there probably aren't too many people more commonly or closely associated with the United States than its first president, who served from 1789 to 1797.
    • Thomas Jefferson. Despite being the third president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson is also pretty well known for the things he accomplished outside of the presidency, which he held from 1801 to 1809.
    • James Madison. While the United States' third president was perhaps most well known for writing the Declaration of Independence, its fourth president, James Madison, was the man largely considered "the father of the Constitution," as well as being one of the major proponents of the Bill of Rights.
    • James Monroe. When it comes to the fifth president of the U.S., James Monroe, there are typically a few different lenses through which his time in office is viewed, a period that lasted from 1817 to 1825.
  2. Jan 24, 2024 · Under the 22nd Amendment of the Constitution, an elected president can only serve two terms in office for a total of eight years. Several VERIFY readers asked if Trump can run for and serve two more terms if he is reelected as president in 2024.

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  3. Sep 6, 2022 · After lengthy negotiations — notably about whether the limit should be two four-year terms or one six-year term — the 22nd Amendment eventually passed Congress in 1947.

  4. Jul 4, 2024 · But there’s precedent for declining to run for a second term and stepping aside. Most recently, and possibly most famously, back in 1968.

  5. U.S. presidential election results. 1 In elections from 1789 to 1804, each elector voted for two individuals without indicating which was to be president and which was to be vice president. 2 In early elections, electors were chosen by legislatures, not by popular vote, in many states.

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