No.
Senators are elected by the people.
Where ever they please.
They dont.
No, though many presidents were previously governors (including Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush). Many other presidents were senators or vice-presidents.
The UK is in Europe while the US is in North America. The UK still uses the monarchy system of kings and queens while the US just has a president, governors and senators.
Typically, each state has one Governor and two Senators in Congress.
Congressmen, senators, legislators, governors, presidents, etc.
normally no they dont. most people dont tend to strike out at senators / governors families in the usa.
Four US presidents were both state governors and US Senators:James Monroe (VA), Martin Van Buren (NY), John Tyler (VA) and Andrew Johnson (TN) . In addition, Andrew Jackson was a US Senator from TN and was once military governor of Florida . William Henry Harrison was the governor of Indiana Territory and later was elected to the US Senate from Ohio.
Under the original Constitution, senators were to be appointed by state legislatures or governors, not elected by the people-in fact, this rule did not change until the Seventeenth Amendment (1913) established direct elections for senators.
Yes, there are 100 US Senators
It established direct election of US Senators by the population of their district, as opposed to the original plan under the Constitution in which state legislatures selected senators. The new arrangement prevented deadlocked legislatures, and provided that governors might be authorized to appoint interim senators to represent their state.