shanek said:Not quite. If a Vice President has served more than two years as President, he can only be elected once, as per the 22nd Amendment. So a VP can serve two years at a max, then be elected twice, for a total of ten years.
I think there's a pathological situation you're overlooking:
Amendment XXII
No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a termto which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.
Note the singular "a term."
I could be elected VP in 2004, have my running mate died in 2007, and serve until 2008. In 2008, I opt not to run as president, but again run as VP. Winning in 2008, my running mate drops dead in 2011, and I serve as president until 2012. Again, I don't want to run for president, but I run as VP in 2012 and win. My running mate drops dead in 2015, and I finish out his term while narrowly escaping indictment for all these suspiciously convenient deaths.
I can continue serving one year out of four forever.
More to the point, the ban is only on electing a president more than twice. If I had run and won (as VP) three times (in 04, 08, as 12), and in each case the President-elect had died in early December, I would have become president as per amendment XX. Again, this could go on forever as long as I can escape being tried and convicted for these suspiciously convenient deaths.