I took up my current post in Washington, D.C., six years ago—not even three full months into the Trump administration. “Historically, very few presidents have served for only one term; they usually do two,” was something I often heard, right along with comments like, “We’ve got to stop Trump from getting re-elected no matter what,” and, “Normally, you’d get a president for two terms, but we want to keep Trump at one.”
This “two-term assumption” is, historically speaking, not exactly accurate. Of the 45 U.S. presidents preceding Biden (counting Grover Cleveland, who served as the 22nd and 24th president, twice), 14 served two four-year terms—or even more. There have also been three presidents who were reelected but served less than four years in their second term. Even adding these three in, the total number of presidents who have been reelected is only 17. The 27 remaining presidents either did not win reelection or did not seek reelection in the first place. Seeing these numbers—17 vs. 27—it is clear that, in fact, most presidents in U.S. history have only served a single term.
Currently, U.S. presidents are limited to two terms. While the average American may remember that Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) was exceptionally elected to four terms, what may not be as commonly known is that the official two-term limit was added to the Constitution only relatively recently, in 1951. Before then, presidents followed the precedent set by the first president, George Washington, who gracefully stepped away from office after serving two terms. Thus, FDR’s “exception” was merely a disinclination to follow precedent rather than any violation of statute. Going back further, there were other presidents who sought a third term: the 18th president, Grant, and the 26th president, Theodore Roosevelt. However, they both eventually withdrew from their third-term race due to losses in the primaries or party policy.
FDR ran for his third term under the banner of staying out of World War II, then rebranded his cause to winning said war to carry himself through a fourth successful election. Concerns about how such an approach could lead to a president serving unlimited terms led to a movement to codify the previous two-term precedent into law. This resulted in the 1951 passage of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution, which established the two-term limit in place today.