federal judicial district
federal judicial district
That is correct. According to the Constitution, Article II Sec. 2, the President has the power to appoint whoever he wants, but with the "advice and consent" of the Senate (not the whole Congress, only the Senate). So yes, as long as the Congress agrees, the President can appoint whoever he wants. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advice_and_consent
yes they can
yes they can
The official titles of each presiding officer is: The Senate: Vice President The House of Representatives: Speaker of the House. When the VP is not available, they have a person who is called the President Pro Tempore.
Yes. It has a president, a vice president, a senate, a congress and a governor for each province.
There are 100 senators, 2 from each state. The Vice President serves as the President of the Senate and provides the tie-breaking vote when needed.
After the vice president it is the speaker of the house( currently Nancy Pelosi). After that President Pro tempore of the senate( the person who is president of the senate when the VP is not). After the president Pro temp it is each cabinet member in order of their creation.
There are 3 branches in the United States. Executive branch- PRESIDENT (and vice president). They pass/veto bills, deal with foreign countries, appoint Supreme Court judges, etc. Legislative branch- CONGRESS. There are two houses of Congress, the House of Representatives and the Senate. They make laws. Judical branch- SUPREME COURT and the lower courts. They decide whether laws are constitutional or not, and keep justice.
There are 100 members of the U.S. Senate, 2 from each of the 50 states. The Vice President of the United States is the ex officio President of the Senate and can only vote to break a tie.
There are one hundred senators, two from each state in the union. If you include the President of the Senate, who is not an elected senator but who is the sitting vice president of the US, you could say there are 101 seats. The President of the Senate can break a tie vote.
the house of representatives and the senate