This is not easy, because the sort order is defined in Pynac, a fork of Ginac, which Sage uses for its basic symbolic manipulation. However, depending on what you need, it is possible programmatically:
sage: F = 1 + x + x^2
sage: "+".join(map(str,sorted([f for f in F.operands()],key=lambda exp:exp.degree(x))))
'1+x+x^2'
I don't know whether this sort of thing is powerful enough for your needs, though. You may have to traverse the "expression tree" quite a bit but at least your sort of example seems to work.
sage: F = a + a^2*x + x^2 - a*x^2
sage: "+".join(map(str,sorted([f for f in F.operands()],key=lambda exp:exp.degree(x))))
'a+a^2*x+-a*x^2+x^2'
Doing this in a short statement requires a number of Python tricks like this, which are very well worth learning if you are going to use Sage (or Numpy, or pandas, or ...) a fair amount.