Event class: term, re-election, run, re-elected, office, seek, election, ran, elected, announced
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Joshua Hill (politician) | He served in the Senate until the end of his term in 1873 and did not run for reelection. |
Gerald Jennings | He has announced he will not run for a sixth term as mayor in 2013. |
Dan Patrick (Texas politician) | On November 6, 2012, he was elected to a full four-year term. |
Herbert Baker (politician) | He returned to office the following year, winning another two year term after finishing third of fifteen candidates in the 1929 election. |
Fob James | James's decision not to run again for governor in 1982 eased the way for George Wallace to return to office for a fourth and final term. |
Rod Smith (politician) | Smith's term expired in January 2013 when he was succeeded by Allison Tant. |
Janet Napolitano | Arizona's constitution provides a two-consecutive-term term limit for its governors, meaning Napolitano would have been barred from seeking a third term in office in 2010. |
Edward Wiley Ray | On September 29, 1989, Commissioner Ray's term at the CRT expired and he did not seek another term. |
Randy Gardner (politician) | He went on to serve 7 more full terms in the House, until being term limited in 2000. |
Leslie Young | He ran for a fifth term in office in the 1986 Alberta general election. |
Mary Evelyn Parker | Parker served until January 1, 1987, when she retired with nearly a year and a half left in her fifth term. |
Curtis Joubert | In 1994, Rougeau was elected mayor to succeed Joubert, who did not seek another term. |
Joe Hogsett | Hogsett went on to win election to the office and served until December 1994, when he declined to run for re-election. |
James Hartley (Canadian politician) | Hartley ran for his sixth term in office in the 1955 Alberta general election. |
Samuel A. Barnes | At the end of his seventh term in 1925 he did not seek re-election and missed out of council for a year. |
James H. "Jim" Brown | Brown was sworn in for his third term in January 2000 but never finished the year in office. |
Robert M. Morgenthau | He was elected to a full term in 1977 and was re-elected seven times. |
Sam Sloan | In 2007, Sloan ran for reelection to the USCF Executive Board, but was unsuccessful, finishing a distant ninth out of ten candidates. |
Ernest House Sr. | His most recent, fourth term as Chairman ended in 2010. |
C. Anthony Muse | He only served one term in the House, not running for re-election in 1998. |
Stephen Buhrer | After serving two terms, he returned to serve another term on the city council before he died in Cleveland in 1907. |
Lorne Proudfoot | Proudfoot ran for his third term in office in the 1930 Alberta general election. |
Christine Quinn | In 2003, she won re-election to her second full term with 86 % of the vote. |
Rashida Tlaib | In 2008, Tobocman encouraged Tlaib to run for his seat, which he would be vacating due to term limit s. |
Albert Ritchie | Ritchie was nominated for a fourth term in September 1930. |
Jim Schwantz | He was re-elected to a second term as mayor in 2013, running unopposed. |
Mohamed ElBaradei | His third and last term ended in November 2009. |
Joseph Henri Picard | He was re-elected to a two year term in 1905, placing fourth of ten candidates. |
Merv Leitch | He ran for his second term in office in the 1975 Alberta general election, this time with ministerial advantage. |
Bill Diachuk | He was defeated running for a second term in office in the 1964 Edmonton municipal election finishing eighth out of ten candidates. |
Michael F. Brennan | In 1998, he won re-election to a fourth term unopposed. |
Archibald D. Johnston | He stood for office for one more term, in the 1989 Alberta general election. |
Robert Wagner Dowling | Dowling ran for a second term in office a couple years later in the 1971 Alberta general election. |
Douglas Shulman | Shortly after President Obama was re-elected in the 2012 presidential election, on November 11, 2012, Shulman finished serving out his full term as Commissioner. |
John Thompson (Manitoba politician) | As an election drew near in fall 1962, and after nine years in the Legislature, Thompson decided not to seek re-election. |
Gil Gutknecht | In March 2005 he announced he was running for a seventh term. |
Dick Pound | Pound's term as WADA president ended at the end of 2007 ; he chose not to run for another term. |
Ken Kowalski | The 1986 general election would see Kowalski win re-election to his third term in office. |
Janice Sarich | She did not seek reelection in 2007, allowing her to run for a seat in the Alberta Legislature. |
Leonard Halmrast | Halmrast ran for a fifth term in the 1959 Alberta general election. |
Stephanie Rawlings-Blake | On June 14, 2007, Rawlings-Blake announced that she would seek a full four-year term as Council president. |
Pierre Howard | He was elected to a four-year term and was re-elected in 1994. |
John Russell Love | Love ran for a third term in the 1930 Alberta general election. |
Gayle McLaughlin | McLaughlin won a second term in office in the 2010 municipal election. |
Tom Chambers (politician) | Chambers ran for re-election to a third term in the 1979 general election. |
Mayoralty of Dianne Feinstein | She was prevented from seeking a third term in office and was succeeded in 1987 by Art Agnos. |
Robert M. Morgenthau | Morgenthau announced in 2005, aged 85, that he would run for a ninth full term as district attorney. |
Joseph Franklin Ada | He was the first governor of Guam to be reelected to a consecutive term in office, after winning reelection in 1990. |
David L. Thomas | South Carolina state senators serve four-year terms coinciding with presidential elections, and Thomas was not up for re-election until 2012. |
Joe Parisi | He began his two year term on April 18, and was elected to his first four year term in 2013. |
Herbert Baker (politician) | He sought re-election at the conclusion of this term, in the 1928 election, but finished eighth of fourteen candidates and was defeated. |
Ian Reid (Alberta politician) | Reid won his second term in office in the 1982 Alberta general election. |
Walter L. Tooze | Tooze then won a full six-year term that same year and won re-election in 1956. |
Thomas Tweedie | Tweedie was re-elected to his second term in the 1913 Alberta general election. |
Martin Woolf | Woolf ran for his third term in office in the 1917 Alberta general election. |
Bill Cassidy | On October 20, 2007, Cassidy was re-elected, this time to a full four-year term in the Louisiana State Senate. |
Eugene Talmadge | Elected to a fourth term in 1946, he died before taking office. |
Richard F. Kneip | He twice served two-year terms and then was elected to a final four-year term in 1974. |
Craig Mazin | He did not seek re-election, and his term expired in September 2006. |
Ant?nio Guterres | In April 2010, the General Assembly re-elected him to a second five-year term. |
Glenn Kothmann | Kothmann did not seek reelection to another senate term in 1986. |
Donald H. Sparrow | Sparrow ran for his third and final term in the 1989 Alberta general election. |
Roy Farran | He would run for re-election in the 1975 Alberta general election with ministerial advantage. |
Charles Edward Johnston | He would be re-elected to a fifth term in office with another comfortable plurality in the 1953 Canadian federal election. |
Chuck Grassley | Grassley sought a sixth term in the 2010 election. |
Sean Connaughton | He was re-elected to a second four-year term, beginning January 1, 2004. |
Mark Slavens | As a result, Slavens' term will be up for election during the 2008 general election for the remainder of the term. |
Richard Finan | With term limits now in effect in Ohio, Finan was only eligible for one final term, and won in 1998. |
Frank Pelzman | He was elected to a full four-year term as mayor in 2003. |
Hugh John Montgomery | Montgomery ran for re-election to his second term in office in the 1917 Alberta general election. |
Suzanne Bonamici | ; 2012 regular election In November 2012, Bonamici won re-election to her first full term with over 60 % of the vote. |
Hugh Horner | Horner would run for his final term in federal office in the 1965 federal election. |
Mian Amer Mahmood | He was re-elected for a subsequent term of four years which he successfully completed in 2009. |
Kenneth McLeod | He finished third of seventeen candidates in this election and was elected to a two year term, but resigned in 1905. |
Moshe Rubashkin | At the end of his three-year term in January 2008, he successfully prevented elections to take place until May of the following year. |
Robert Adley (Louisiana politician) | Adley in 2011 ran without opposition in his bid for his third and final term in Senate District 36. |
William Duncan Wylie | Wylie would attempt to run for a 3rd term and be re-elected in the 1953 federal election. |
Henry Ruste | Ruste would run for a fourth term in the 1967 general election this time with ministerial advantage. |
Leo T. McCarthy | McCarthy retired from public office at the end of his third term as lieutenant governor on January 2, 1995, having been prohibited from seeking re-election to a fourth term in office due to term limits in state law and was succeeded by fellow Democratic then - State Controller and future Governor Gray Davis. |
William Harold Clark | He sought re-election in the 1905 election, but finished fifth of ten candidates ; only four were elected. |
Dennis A. Blakeslee | He was reelected to another term in 1908. |
Marvin Moore | He would run for his fourth term in office in the 1982 general election. |
Robert Castelli | After holding elective office in local government, Castelli ran for and was elected to the State Assembly in a special election in February 2010, and was reelected just eight months later for a second, and this time full two-year term. |
Lee Leavitt | He stood for his third term in office in the 1967 Alberta general election. |
Raymond Reierson | He ran for re-election to his fourth term in the 1963 Alberta general election. |
Rick Renzi | On August 23, 2007, Renzi announced he would not seek another term. |
Catherine Chichak | She would run for her third term in office in the 1979 Alberta general election. |
Ray Nagin | He was term limited by law and left office on May 3, 2010. |
Rise of Neville Chamberlain | Chamberlain was re-elected Lord Mayor in 1916, but he did not complete his term. |
Cornelius Gallagher (Canadian politician) | He was elected, placing fifth of nine candidates, but did not seek re-election in 1897. |
Coke R. Stevenson | He was elected to a second term in 1944, effectively unopposed. |
Francis C. Thompson | Because of state term limits, Thompson was ineligible to have sought a ninth four-year term in the nonpartisan blanket primary held on October 20, 2007. |
Jane Groenewegen | Jane was re-elected to a fifth term in the 2011 Northwest Territories general election. |
James B. Black | In December 2006, Black announced that he would not seek another term as Speaker. |
Eugene Talmadge | During Arnall's term, the state legislature lengthened his term to four years and prohibited him from seeking re-election in 1946. |
Alfred Hooke | Hooke ran for a fifth term and won easily in the 1952 Alberta general election. |
Lincoln Chafee | On September 4, 2013, Chafee announced that he would not seek re-election to a second term as Governor. |
Phil Bartlett | Term limit s will prevent him from seeking a fifth term in 2012. |
Pascal Breland | He was re-appointed two years later on July 10, 1878 to serve on the 1st Council of the Northwest Territories. |
Larry Shaben | Shaben ran for a second term in office in the 1979 Alberta general election. |