Franklin D. Roosevelt, the thirty-second President of the United States, served as President from March 4, 1933 until his death on April 12, 1945, a total of 4,422 days (12 years, 1 month, 8 days). He served for three complete terms and a few months into a fourth. No one else ever served for more than 8 years His record will never be equaled because term limits are now in place.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated on Mar 4, 1933 and died in office on Apr 12, 1945 after serving just over 3 terms.
Ferdinand Marcos was the longest Filipino presidency with 21 year from 1965 to 1986
Executive office of the president
No, the president is not the Oath Of Office.
If the president dies then the vice president takes office if the vice president dies then the speaker of office is president
president who died in office that is considered to be the worst president
The longest a president can be in office is two terms, in whitch that is eight years.
Franklin Roosevelt
Well 200 years ago Washington was president.
eight years
because the longest you can serve is 8 years.
Ferdinand Marcos was the longest Filipino presidency with 21 year from 1965 to 1986
Lennart Meri. He was the first president after the end of the Soviet occupation and was in office 1992 - 2001.
The individuals that served the longest in the executive office of the president are a number. There many who served two full terms but Franklin Roosevelt is the one who served the longest as he managed to stay in office for three full terms.
No U.S. President was in office for four full terms. The longest U.S. Presidency was that of Franklin D. Roosevelt, which lasted 12 years and a little over a month, from March 1933 to April 1945.
America? No-one, Franklin D Roosevelt was the longest serving president, he served for 12 years from 1933 to 1945 and died in office on April 12th.
Giorgio Napolitano is, to date, Italy's longest-serving president. He has held office since being sworn in on 15 May 2006.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt did Served a total of four times. He died during his fourth term.