vice president
Speaker of the house
president pro tempore of the senate
various cabinet department heads
president, vice-president, speaker of the house, sec of defense.
The Vice-President then the Speaker of the House of Representatives
First the President, then the Vice President, then the speaker of the house...
The Vice President for the remainder of the term.
Yes! The Vice President, the the Speaker of the House. This is the current line of succession: http://www.patriotstoolbox.org/america/presidentiallineofsuccession.htm
No one: Everyone is dead. The question originally asked who becomes President if the President dies (the Vice President), and who becomes President if he subsequently dies (Speaker of the House), and so on (President pro tempore, then Secretary of State, other Cabinet secretaries, members of Congress, etc.). The complete Presidential line of succession is at the related link.
As regards who becomes President of the U.S. if everyone in the line of succession dies, there may be so much chaos in that event that there will be no President. There are many individuals in the line of succession, and it is highly improbable that anything but a planet-wide catastrophe would kill all those set in line by the 1947 Act that governs the "ranking" of those who might become Commander in Chief.
if the president dies or leaves office, the vice president becomes president. Then the new president then chooses another vice president. Both the senate ant the house of representatives must approve of the choice. it also gives the vice president a role in determining whether a president is able to go back to work(Clarify the presidential line of succession.)
The President appoints a new VP with Congress's approval. If the President and VP were to both die or leave office suddenly, then the Speaker of the House of Representatives becomes president and a new VP is appointed. The order of presidential succession goes: President VP Speaker of the House President Pro-tempore of the Senate Cabinet (by order of when the positions were established)
The Vice President is next in the order of succession.
vice president Speaker of the house president pro tempore of the senate various cabinet department heads
The next person in the order of succession after the Vice-President is the Speaker of the House, then the Senate's President Pro Temp, and then the Secretary of State.
Sarah Palin
The same person who was president before the speaker of the house died. In the order of presidential succession, the president pro tempore of the Senate is next after the House Speaker.
Vice PresidentSpeaker of the HouseSecretary of the TreasurySecretary of AgricultureorVice PresidentSpeaker of the HouseSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralorVice PresidentPresident pro tempore of the SenateSecretary of StateSecretary of Veteran Affairs
When a president dies, it is important for someone to take his place. That should be the vice president. However, if an attack happened and the vice president dies with the president, there is a protocol for who gets the job next. That person has to have the nuclear launch codes and needs to take charge of the military. A president has a big job and someone needs to be our leader.
Vice- President is the first in the line of succession for the presidency. Indeed such is the primary purpose for the office of vice-president.
Succession doesn't happen unless the president dies. but to answer your question, the first four people after the president are: 1: Vice President, if he dies then: 2: Attourney General, if he dies then: 3: Speaker of the house of representatives, if they die: 4: Secretary of Defence of the initial president before people started dying
"Succession of the President" is the order in which other people are to take that office if the President dies or is unable to perform the functions of the office.
The Speaker of the House is the next in line of succession.
Yes! The Vice President, the the Speaker of the House. This is the current line of succession: http://www.patriotstoolbox.org/america/presidentiallineofsuccession.htm