No, the Constitution makes no provisions against candidacy for President regarding religious affiliation.
No. Such a clause would actually be unconstitutional, as it would violate the 1st Amendment.
No- there are no official religious qualifications for President. Of course, voters may take religion into consideration when they vote.
No
No. There are no religious qualifications or requirements of any kind listed in the Constitution.
The Constitution of India has not defined any minimum age for a candidate to contest as a President of India.
The qualifications were put into place by the founding fathers when they wrote the Constitution and have not changed. I think they did not want to eliminate anybody who might be a good President. The voters add their own qualifications when they vote and there is a grueling campaign that tends to expose any weaknesses in a candidate. I wonder what qualifications you would like to add.
Answernatural-born citizens of the United States of Americaat least thirty-five years oldmust have been resident in the United States for at least fourteen years
No. The Constitution doesn't list any requirements for Supreme Court nominees; the appropriate qualifications are left to the President and Congress to determine, and have evolved over the years. There is no "natural born" citizen or minimum age mandate, either.
Yes, the Constitution states in Clause 4 of the 12th Amendment, the amendment that established vice presidential elections,"... no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States."
A religious test.
They felt that any honest, hardworking man could be a successful president.
The vice president becomes president if the president is incapacitated, so he needs to have all the qualifications of a president, just in case.
There are no constitutional requirements for becoming a federal judge, other than being nominated by the President and approved by a simple majority vote of the Senate. The President typically follows selection criteria established by the American Bar Association Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary, but is not required to do so.
The implied qualifications when running for president are basically qualifications the people look for.I.e. Wealth, education, looks, access to money etc.
It's middle school. There really aren't any