House Rep. Ted Yoho has filed a statement of candidacy for 2020 after saying he wouldn't run for a fifth term.

When Ted Yoho first ran for office he set his own term limits at four, while taking aim at incumbent “career politicians” along the campaign trail. It was a promise he consistently made each election, most recently in 2018.

But the Republican congressman may now have other plans.

Yoho has filed a statement of candidacy form for the 2020 election with the Federal Election Commission. He has quietly raised $10,500 this year and reestablished his Ted Yoho for Congress committee.

Kat Cammack, Yoho’s deputy chief of staff and campaign manager, has not returned calls or emails asking about his 2020 intentions.

Yoho represents Florida’s third congressional district, which includes Alachua, Marion, Union, Putnam and Clay counties, a district largely made up of Republican voters. He defeated Democratic candidate Yvonne Hinson Hayes in 2016 by about 47,000 votes, earning 57.6% of the vote.

Yoho, a University of Florida graduate and longtime Gainesville resident, was a large-animal veterinarian prior to taking office. He serves on the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee.

During an interview with The Sun last October, he said if elected, he would honor his campaign pledge for four terms and pass the baton to somebody else. Two months later he filed his statement of candidacy for 2020.

He attended President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign rally in Orlando this week. The president gave him a shout out during the rally and previously endorsed the congressman last year.

Yoho on Thursday returned the favor by formally endorsing Trump’s 2020 run.

“In a time of divisive politics and anti-American policies coming from pro-socialist Democrats, we need unshakable leadership and we have found that in President Trump,” Yoho is quoted in a release.

Yoho has previously been critical of Trump’s use of Twitter, calling his tweets “a waste of internet space and broadband space.”

The congressman has been a staunch supporter of the Second Amendment, earning him an “A” grade and campaign donations from the National Rifle Association.

He was one of the few congressmen who voted against a bill last week that provided additional resources for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to address and research causes for children and infants who die from sudden unexpected deaths. The bill passed with 92% support.