no..the presidential candidate decides whom he will appoint to run as vice president with him
The vice president is elected at the same time that the president is elected, as stated by the 12th Amendment. So, every 4 years.
They are elected in separate ballots by the same electors.
The president,vice-president , all 435 representatives to the House and one-third of the senators are all elected on the same day. Some states also elect their governor and other state officials on that day.
Certainly. It did not work to have the president and vice-president working against each other as happened before the 12th amendment . Further voters need to know that if something happens to the president, his general approach will be continued by his successor.
The US president has always been elected in substantially the same way. The real change was in the way the vice-president was elected.
to be the same as or corresponding to
The vice president of the United States is elected for a term of four years, just like the president. They are elected together on a single ticket. There are no term limits for the vice president, so they can potentially serve multiple terms if re-elected.
He's on the same ticket as the presidential hopeful.
I don't think the parties have to be the same, but they usually are because the president wants a vice that will support him or her.
I am not quite sure what you are asking. The vice-president is elected in the same way and at the same time as the President. They run as a team. That is all they legally share.
It has always been the same, never has it changed. Voting has changed (paper to electronic) but HOW you vote for the president and vice president hasnt changed
Four years. The same as the President that he serves.