Those offices are completely separate, so yes, they are elected separately. The vice-president is elected with the president, while a lieutenant governor is elected with a governor.
Wait i forgot. i remember separately.
No, he is elected with the governor like the Vice President is with the president.
No, he is elected with the governor like the Vice President is with the president.
A state's governor is directly elected by its registered voters. The U. S. president (and vice president) is elected by a group of electors appointed by the states.
43 states have a lieutenant-governor. 25 are elected with the governor and 18 are elected separately. Arizona, Arkansas, Maine, Mass., New Hampshire and Oregon do not have a lieutenant-governor.
Bill Clinton was governor of Arkansas before he was elected president.
No, Florida is one of the 25 states that elect their governor and lieutenant governor on the same ticket. 18 states elect the governor and lieutenant governor separately, and there are other guidelines that apply to different states.
President George W. Bush is the US president that was twice elected the governor of Texas. He served as governor from January 17, 1995 to December 21, 2000.
A state's governor is directly elected by its registered voters. The U. S. president (and vice president) is elected by a group of electors appointed by the states.
Yes.
Bill Clinton was elected as the governor of Arkansas.He was later elected twice as the President of the United States.Hillary Clinton was elected as a senator from New York.
yes i-- Being a governor has no direct relation to being elected president. (It is just one of many past experiences that votes may view favorably when they vote for president.)