Yes, if they registered as an independent, they can vote for whomever they want.
They can run in the primary, but the party picks the person who will run in the election. This is the purpose of the political convention.
It doesn't because vice president Hendricks was in a different political party than the president at thay time.
One of the cons of having the president and congress be from the same political party is that there might not be a balance and that it might not represent Americans properly. One of the pros of having the same political party for president and in congress is that there is less opposition to pass the bills and law that they want to pass.
When the President and the majority of Congress are of the same political party, the principle of separation of powers becomes diluted. It begins to defeat the purpose of the checks and balances system.
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It is only natural for the President to appoint people who share his views on government and will work to carry out his programs. Such people are more likely to be found in his own party. A first term president needs to have party support to run for re-election and one way to gain support is through appointments. He may also need to repay people who have helped him get elected the first time by making them an ambassador.
No, they have to be of the same political party.
It doesn't because vice president Hendricks was in a different political party than the president at thay time.
One of the cons of having the president and congress be from the same political party is that there might not be a balance and that it might not represent Americans properly. One of the pros of having the same political party for president and in congress is that there is less opposition to pass the bills and law that they want to pass.
People in a political party share many of the same political beliefs and work together to get their candidates elected to office, and to defeat the opposition.
No, when the president is running for office. They have the opportunity then to pick who they want as their running mate and eventual vice president. Much like right now with Obama and Biden, they stay within the same political party.
They always have been from the same party. The political parties nominate a ticket to run together. It makes it easier to make decisions and to carry out functions of government when they come from the same party.
Once upon a time....... Service was more important than political party but that died out pretty quickly in the great political experiment that is the United States of America.
No, the President and Vice President are memnbers of the same political party. This was not always true in American politics, but it has been true for the past century.
a president typically believes in what his political party believes and stands for what they stand for. a president normally makes decisions that his party agrees with, though there is not written responsibility to one party or another if elected. if the president is a republican, then they do not HAVE TO do what the republican party would like them to do, though they typically do because they believe the same things. Same with the democrats. party distinguishment is more of a difference in what people believe is right and what they stand for
When the President and the majority of Congress are of the same political party, the principle of separation of powers becomes diluted. It begins to defeat the purpose of the checks and balances system.
Huh? Let's try answering a couple different questions. Understand that politics is all about the next election. If the president and both houses of Congress are in the same political party, and there are at least 60 senators from the president's party (which is what it takes to shut down a filibuster) things are done in Congress that the president will sign because the party wants to prove to the voters that it can accomplish the people's work. If any of the following are true: the president is from a different party than the one controlling either, or both, houses of Congress or there are less than 60 members of the president's party in the Senate then nothing gets done, so the other party can go to the voters and say, "pick us because my party can solve the problem of gridlock in government today."
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