I don't believe there is a limit to the number of terms an individual can serve as vice president.
The New President Chooses a Replacement , (:
No. It is quite unlikely that this would ever happen. When the Vice President becomes President, a new Vice President is selected and becomes next in line. Only if the new President were to die before a new Vice President was selected would the Speaker of the House become President. Then a new Vice President and a new Speaker would be selected and they would both be ahead of the President Pro Tempore in the order of ascendence. The Secretary of State would become President only if the President, Vice President, Speaker, and President Pro Tempore all died at essentially the same time.
If both the president and vice president die, the Speaker of the House of Representatives becomes the President of the United States. The new president nominates someone to become the new vice president, and he or she will assume the office of vice president after both houses of Congress confirm the nomination by a majority vote.
If both the president and vice president die, the Speaker of the House of Representatives becomes the President of the United States. The new president nominates someone to become the new vice president, and he or she will assume the office of vice president after both houses of Congress confirm the nomination by a majority vote.
The vice-president is promptly sworn in as President if the president dies. An new vice-president is then appointed by the new president subject to approval by Congress. However, it the president dies when there is no vice-president, the Speaker of the House of Representatives would become the president and if there is no House Speaker, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate would become president.
The Vice President could become Acting President in the event of Presidential disability, and there is no codified term. A new Vice President would not be nominated. Should the Vice President succeed to the Presidency, then he would serve out the remainder of that President's term, and a new Vice President would ordinarily be nominated to fill the Vice President's unexpired term.
The vice president would become president no selection is done by anyone
The Vice President, Joe Biden, is next in line for President.
In this situation, the new president will nominate someone to be Vice-president . If both houses of Congress agree, the nominee become the VP.
If the President dies in office and the Vice President takes over the office of the President, the Speaker of the House does not automatically become the Vice President. Under the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the new Vice President is nominated by the President. The new Vice President then takes office upon confirmation from both houses of Congress by a majority vote.
If the president is not present, dies, resigns, impeached, or is otherwise unable to fulfill his or her duties, that would be when the vice president will generally serve as president.if for some major reason the president is unable to carry out his duties like dying for instance
If the president were to die, the current vice president would become president and then would nominate someone to be the new vice president. Congress would have to approve the nomination for it to take effect.