Yes
The candidate for vice-president is nominated at the same national convention that nominates the presidential candidate.
The candidate for vice-president is nominated at the same national convention that nominates the presidential candidate.
The final choice is made by the electoral college, just as the choice for president is made. In every state, the vice presidential candidate appears on the ballot along with the presidential candidate; they run as a team. This is a huge change from the original method in the Constitution, wherein the vice president was the presidential candidate with the second most votes.
President: James Madison Vice President: George Clinton
VICE PRESIDENT.
The individual was the Vice-President not a candidate. It was Dan Quayle.
Abraham Lincoln ran for president with Andrew Johnson as the Vice Presidential candidate. This would be Lincoln's second term as president, having chosen a new vice-presidential candidate.
no..the presidential candidate decides whom he will appoint to run as vice president with him
They are called the party's presidential ticket. Also the party's presidential nominees.
The VP candidate is chosen soon after the presidential nomination is made.
The Presidential Candidate's main purpose in picking the Vice President is "balancing the ticket." To "balance the ticket" is to find a VP Candidate that deposits values into a Presidential campaign that will bring support from voters that were not previously inclined to vote for that candidate. In most every United States presidential election within the past 30 years, the presidential candidate chose a VP candidate with almost opposite views and beliefs so that they might hoard the votes.
the people