I may not understand your question-- a president could be re-elected and so would stay in office for another term after his first term ended.
No, a president cannot be impeached before taking office because impeachment is a process to remove a sitting president from office for misconduct or abuse of power.
"Sitting duck president" is a colloquial term that refers to a president who is perceived as being unprotected or vulnerable to attack or criticism. It suggests that the president is in a precarious position and easily targeted by adversaries or challenges.
a Lame Duck. or A still-in-office-president.
Only if the salary change was authorized by a previous congress and president in a previous term. Changes to the president's salary can not take place until after the sitting president has left office.
Theodore was the first sitting president to leave the country. He visited Panama while he was president.
The main roles are to be the formal President of the Senate and to become President if a sitting President dies, resigns, or is removed from office by the impeachment process.
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President John F. Kennedy had a Rocking Chair in the oval office. He had a bad back from a war injury, and sitting in the chair gave him relief from the pain.
No, a sitting president cannot be arrested for criminal offenses they may have committed while in office. They can only be impeached by Congress and removed from office.
Legal schollars are not agreed on this point, but there is no explicit limit in the Constitution to how many terms a person may be elected to the office of Vice-President. The two term limit applies only to the office of President. YES they can
The Twenty-Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution clarifies that the Vice President becomes President at the death, impeachment, resignation or incapacity of the sitting President. It also establishes procedures for filling a vacancy in the office of the Vice President,
No. The US Constitution specificaly states that the sitting president's term of office ends at noon on 20th January. The president-elect may take the oath of office anywhere he happens to be just before noon, and be sworn in by almost anyone serving in some sort of official capacity. No emergency can delay that process.