term limits
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Algeria
- In Algeria: Bouteflika’s third term and the Arab Spring protests of 2011
…a constitutional amendment abolishing presidential term limits. The arrangement permitted Bouteflika the opportunity to run for his third consecutive term, which he easily won in April 2009.
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Argentina
- In Carlos Menem
…in 1995 (the pact also limited presidential terms to four years and imposed restrictions on executive control over certain branches of government).
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authoritarianism
Azerbaijan
- In Azerbaijan: Constitutional framework
…2009 removed the presidency’s two-term limit.
Read More - In Azerbaijan: Presidency of Ilham Aliyev
…the removal of the two-term limit on the presidency, which would allow Aliyev to run for a third term in the coming years, as well as new restrictions on the media.
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Bolivia
- In Bolivia: Bolivia in the 21st century
…petition from the MAS, removed term limits on the presidency. That ruling was upheld by the Supreme Electoral Court in December 2018, setting the stage for Morales to seek the presidency, yet again, in 2019.
Read More - In Evo Morales
…the constitutional court to remove term limits for the presidency, and in November the court did just that. In December 2018 the Supreme Electoral Court upheld that decision, prompting widespread street protests but paving the way for Morales to run for reelection in 2019.
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Burundi
- In Burundi: Third-term controversy
…country’s constitution, both of which limited a president to two elected terms. Nkurunziza’s supporters argued that his first term didn’t count toward the two-term limit because he had been elected by Parliament, not by the people. On May 5 the country’s Constitutional Court ruled that a potential third term for…
Read More - In Pierre Nkurunziza: Presidency
…to seven years, with a limit of two consecutive terms. This raised fears that Nkurunziza would stand for president again and potentially extend his time in office for two more terms after the expiration of his current one in 2020. He denied intending to do so, however. His denial appeared…
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Chad
- In Idriss Déby: Presidency
…constitutional referendum that eliminated presidential term limits was denounced by critics as another means of supporting the president’s increasingly autocratic rule. Nonetheless, the referendum passed, clearing the way for Déby’s reelection in 2006 in a poll that was boycotted by most of the opposition. Also that year Déby added Itno,…
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China
- In China: Political developments
…constitution including one that eliminated term limits for the president. This change allowed Xi to rule beyond 2023, when he had been expected to step down after two terms. The amendments, hailed by some analysts as the most significant changes to the country’s constitution since 1982, also allowed for the…
Read More - In Xi Jinping: Consolidation of power
…constitution, including one that abolished term limits for the country’s president and vice president; this change would allow Xi to remain in office beyond 2023, when he would have been due to step down. The NPC also unanimously elected Xi to a second term as president of the country in…
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Ecuador
- In Ecuador: Constitutional framework
…constution, including the removal of term limits for elected office, the implementation of which was to be transitional until 2021. (Under the 2008 constitution the president and the vice president had been limited to two consecutive terms in office.)
Read More - In Ecuador: Ecuador from the late 20th century
…for a referendum that would limit Ecuadoran presidents to two terms. An outraged Correa campaigned against the referendum, but on February 4, 2018, voters approved it by roughly a two-to-one margin, thus preventing Correa from ever running for the presidency again.
Read More - In Rafael Correa: Presidency
…the constitution—including the removal of term limits for all public executive positions, which would enable Correa to run for a fourth term—could not be put to the electorate through referendum and would have to be addressed in the National Assembly.
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Equatorial Guinea
- In Equatorial Guinea: Constitutional framework
…a seven-year term, with a limit of two terms. The president appoints the vice president, the prime minister, and the Council of Ministers. The legislature is bicameral, consisting of the Chamber of Deputies, members of which are directly elected to five-year terms, and the Senate, the majority of its members…
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France
- In Nicolas Sarkozy: Presidency
…for a constitutional change to limit the presidency to two five-year terms.
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Guinea
- In Guinea: Constitutional framework
…a maximum of two six-year terms. A prime minister, who is the head of government, is appointed by the president. Legislators are elected to the unicameral National Assembly by universal suffrage for an unlimited number of five-year terms. The judiciary consists of the Supreme Court, the Court of Audit, and…
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Malawi
- In Malawi: Malawi since 1994
…would not violate the two-term limit stipulated in the constitution. His appeal was denied by a Malawian court just days before the election, and he threw his support behind the primary opposition candidate John Tembo of the MCP.
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Mali
- In Mali: Constitutional framework
The president, who can serve no more than two terms, is the head of state and appoints the prime minister (the head of government) and the cabinet.
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Namibia
- In Namibia: Independence
…from standing for a third term as president, Prime Minister Hage Geingob was SWAPO’s presidential candidate. Geingob won easily, with 86.73 percent of the vote, and SWAPO won an overwhelming majority in the parliamentary vote. Geingob was inaugurated on March 21, 2015, which was Namibia’s 25th anniversary of independence. Geingob…
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New York City
- In Michael Bloomberg: Mayor of New York City
…reelection as mayor if the term-limit law were amended. Several weeks later the New York City Council revised the law to allow three consecutive terms. In November 2009 Bloomberg was reelected.
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Nicaragua
- In Nicaragua: Constitutional framework
…president to serve an additional term in office. Assembly terms are five years and run concurrently with the presidential term. Power is divided among four governmental branches: executive, legislative, judicial, and electoral. The last mentioned is the Supreme Electoral Council, which is responsible for organizing and holding elections.
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Paraguay
- In Paraguay: The Horacio Cartes presidency
…him to run for another term as president. Determined to prevent the ascendence of another Stroessner-like strongman, the country’s 1992 constitution limited Paraguayan presidents to one term. After a Senate vote to amend the constitution failed in August 2016, members of the Colorado Party began holding “alternative” sessions that were…
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Russia
- In Vladimir Putin: Constitutional change and the poisoning of Navalny
…a way that would scrap term limits for presidents, paving the way for him to remain in office indefinitely. Medvedev promptly resigned as prime minister, stating that a new government would give Putin “the opportunity to make the decisions he needs to make.” The proposed constitutional changes were speedily approved…
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Rwanda
- In Rwanda: Moving forward
…constitution to change the presidential term from seven to five years, which would take effect with the term of the winner of the 2024 election, as well as to essentially reset the current term-limit stipulation. The changes would let Kagame stand for a seven-year term in 2017 and then two…
Read More - In Rwanda: Constitutional framework
…for a third consecutive seven-year term in 2017 and, after that, for presidents to serve a five-year term renewable once. The president selects a prime minister, who serves as the head of government.
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Sabato essay on democratizing the United States Supreme Court
- In Democratizing the U.S. Supreme Court
…be willing to serve in term-limited judicial posts. Chief Justice John Roberts favored a term limit before he was nominated to the Court—and a sizable number of legal scholars have also endorsed this reform. As it is, presidents are overlooking many of the ablest and most experienced legal minds, preferring…
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Senegal
- In Abdoulaye Wade
Wade argued that the two-term limit should not be applied retroactively to include his first term, which began in 2000. The country’s Constitutional Council agreed with him, ruling in late January 2012 that his bid for a third term was valid. News of the council’s decision drew much criticism,…
Read More - In Macky Sall: President
…seven to five years and limiting a president to two terms were among several proposed changes to the constitution that Sall submitted to the country’s Constitutional Council in January 2016. The next month, the Constitutional Council rejected Sall’s attempt to shorten his own current term, but the other proposals, including…
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Seychelles
- In Seychelles: History of Seychelles
…change the number of consecutive terms that a president could serve. The number of terms was reduced from three to two.
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Sri Lanka
- In Sri Lanka: Reconstruction of Sri Lanka
…constitution to restore the presidential two-term limit that had been removed in 2010. Having won the most seats in parliamentary elections held on August 17, the UNP formed a six-party coalition government. In June 2016, along with acknowledging that some 65,000 people who had gone missing during the civil war…
Read More - In Mahinda Rajapaksa: Presidency
…some opposition members, that removed limits on the number of terms a president could serve, granted judicial immunity to the president, and gave the president broader powers in making governmental appointments.
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Tajikistan
- In Tajikistan: One-party rule
…constitutional changes that included lifting term limits for President Rahmon and lowering the minimum age for presidential candidates from 35 to 30. The amendments further strengthened the Rahmon family’s already tight grip on power; the amendment concerning presidential term limits had been written to apply only to Rahmon, based on…
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Togo
- In Togo: Faure Gnassingbé’s presidency
…were the reinstatement of presidential term limits (limiting the president to two terms), for the limits to be retroactive, and the introduction of a two-round presidential election system. Some also called for Gnassingbé to step down. The government responded by agreeing to hold a referendum on presidential term limits, but…
Read More - In Faure Gnassingbé: Presidency
The issue of presidential term limits was again at the fore, with protestors demanding a two-term limit to be implemented and applied retroactively, and some protestors called for Gnassingbé to step down. The organizers of the protests, a group of opposition parties that came together to form the Coalition…
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Tunisia
- In Tunisia: Constitutional framework
…and may be reelected only once, although the tenure may be extended in times of imminent danger. Candidates for president must be Muslim, at least 40 years old, and Tunisian citizens by birth. As head of state, the president is the commander in chief of the armed forces and conducts…
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Turkmenistan
- In Turkmenistan: Presidency of Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov
…constitution that would increase the length of a presidential term from five to seven years and remove the upper age limit on the president, which had been set at 70. Observers generally saw the amendments, which went into effect just months before the presidential election scheduled for February 2017, as…
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Venezuela
- In Venezuela: The Hugo Chávez presidency
… calling for the elimination of term limits on all elected officials had been approved by more than 54 percent of voters, clearing the way for Chávez to run for president again in 2012. Legislative elections in September 2010 indicated Chávez’s continued popularity. Yet, although the president’s United Socialist Party of…
Read More - In Hugo Chávez: The Chávez presidency
…have allowed for the president’s indefinite reelection. In December 2007 the package of amendments was narrowly defeated in a popular referendum by a margin of 51 to 49 percent—Chávez’s first defeat at the polls.
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