not necessarily
Gubernatorial elections in Delaware, Indiana, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Utah, Washington and West Virginia coincide with U.S. Presidential elections. Presidential elections coincide with half of the Gubernatorial elections in Vermont and New Hampshire, where the Governors serve two-year terms. In every other state the Governor is elected every four years but not in the same years as the Presidents.
The vice president is elected at the same time that the president is elected, as stated by the 12th Amendment. So, every 4 years.
Senators are elected into power the same way the president is. When the Senator in your area is up for re-election there will be one held on the same day as the presidential election.
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.
Hitler was elected Chancellor of Germany in 1932, the same year Franklin Roosevelt was elected President of the United States.
In a statewide election, which is separate from the Governor election. This means it is possible for the Governor and Lieutenant Governor to be from separate parties, which last happened during George W. Bush's first term.
In the office of the President of the United States, a running mate is the person that the candidate who receives the nomination selects to be their vice president.
As a rule the Vice-president is elected by the same electors that elect the president. However, if a vacancy occurs in the office of vice-president. The president nominates a replacement who must be confirmed by both houses of Congress in order to take office.
The current Lieutenant Governor of Ohio is Mary Taylor. Taylor assumed office as Lieutenant Governor of Ohio on January 10, 2011.
You need to specify where and exactly what you mean by "separate."As far as I'm aware, in every state in the US they're separate in the sense that you can choose to vote for a Governor candidate from one party and a Lt. Governor candidate from a different party, unlike the current US Presidential election system where in the general election you vote for a combined President/Vice President "ticket."They're also separate in that each office has a distinct pool of candidates, unlike the original US Presidential election system where the candidate for President who came in second was made Vice-President.(It's possible that there are states where the above are not true, but I can't think of any.)However, both elections are almost always held at the same time and on the same ballot, so they're not separate in that sense.
No,unless he is elected to be President. The terms of the vice president and the president both expire at the same time. A new election is held in November of the year before the President's term expires in January.
There is always a congressional election held at the same time as the presidential election. However, since Congressmen serve for only a two-year term and the president serves for four years, there is a another Congressional election in the middle of the president's term. ( I am talking about the lower house of Congress. The senate elects one-third of its members every two years, so one-third of the senators are also elected at the same time as the President. )
James Garfield was in the position after the election of 1880. He was a member of Congress and was elected both as president and a US senator from Ohio.