No, there is nothing in the Constitution forbidding women from being president.
Since the establishment of the US constitution in 1789 the age of the president has always been set to 35 years old.
This is a question that is subject to a tremendous amount of debate. Some would say it has never been abandoned. Some would say it has been abandoned (or at least ignored) under every President for at least the past half-century.
every President has been a Christian
the vice president The Vice President of the United States. This is laid down by the Constitution (Art 1, Sec 3, Para 4). However, Para 5 of the same Section provides for the Senate to choose " - a President Pro Tempore, in the absence of the Vice president, or when he shall exercise the office of President of the United States". Interestingly, the Constitution does not require that the President Pro Tempore necessarily be himself a Senator, but in practice he always has been, and nowadays is usually the most senior Senator of the majority party.
Nope! Although to date nobody born outside of the US has been President.
27 amendments to the U. S. Constitution have been ratified. Besides, I don't think the President has anything to do with the process of amending the Constitution.
Changes in the power of the president were either derived by interpreting the present Constitution or by actions of Congress operating under the present Constitution . There is no reason to change the Constitution in order to keep the status quo.
the presidents powers have been reduced..the current president is a ceremonial president
That depends on the constitution of the country. As you have not been specific about the country, it is not possible to be more helpful.
The U. S. Constitution requires an election every two years. In every even-numbered year, every federal congressional district in the U. S. elects a Representative to the U. S. House for a two-year term, and two thirds of the states elect one third of the U. S. Senators for six-year terms. In every second federal election (in every year that is evenly divisible by four), the voters of each state also choose the electors who will elect the president and vice president for four-year terms.
Yes, according to the U.S. Constitution.
As long as the US constitution.