The Answer:
No. The 22nd
Amendment, enacted after Franklin D. Roosevelt was
elected president for the fourth time, imposes a two-term limit on
presidential candidates and was established to formalize a tradition
George Washington
started by refusing to run for a third term in 1796.
The 22nd Amendment states that no person elected president and
no person to hold the office of president for more than two years is
allowed to be elected more than once more. It makes no difference
whether the two terms are consecutive.
This amendment also makes it clear that if Vice President Al
Gore had taken over for President Clinton during the first two years
of Clinton's first term, then he would have only been allowed to run
once more.
What's interesting about Clinton's situation is that the 22nd
Amendment only makes two-term presidents ineligible to "be elected to
the office of President." But is Clinton allowed to
serve as president? For example, what if Clinton
were the Democratic nominee for vice president, and his party won? If
his candidate couldn't finish his/her term, could Clinton be president
again? Or would he be unable to serve as vice president in the first
place? For now, this is an unresolved question.
—The Editors
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