The vice-president and president are elected together as a team. Unless one of vacates his office prematurely, they both serve the same 4-year terms.
The vice president's term of office is four years, just like the president's term. However, there is no limit to the number of terms a vice president can serve.
The constitution states the terms of office and how a president or Vice President can be removed from office.
The Vice President
Al Gore .
4 years
The 20th Amendment specifies that the President and Vice President shall begin their terms of office on January 20th. The Amendment was ratified on January 23,
Depends on the office. Some are two years like the House or the Senate is 6 years. The President can only serve 2 terms of 4 years each, but the Vice President can serve two terms as Vice President and then go on to become President for 2 more terms.
A Vice president's term is four years for one term. Like the President, They can have up to two terms in office.
No, They can not run for two full terms. However,they may run for one more term in office as President of the United States.
The Speaker of the House becomes president if something happened to the president and vice president.
I am not quite sure what you want to know. The president and vice president are elected as a team at the same time and their terms expire at the same time. If the president leaves office before the end of his term, the vice-president becomes president.
Legal schollars are not agreed on this point, but there is no explicit limit in the Constitution to how many terms a person may be elected to the office of Vice-President. The two term limit applies only to the office of President. YES they can
Yes. The Constitution has no limitation to serving as Vice President... only President. That limitation is two elected terms or 10 years. As a recent example, Vice President Bush served for two full terms under Reagan before running and winning the Presidency. He also ran for a second term against Clinton but lost. VP Gore served two terms and ran after that for Presidency and won (but still lost)... but thats another story. The real question you should be asking,however, is whether a President who has served two terms or 10 years can then serve as Vice President. The Answer to that is NO although that has never been tested. The 12th Amendment states "no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States."