35 years of age, natural-born citizen, and have lived in the U.S. for 14 years
The three Constitutional requirements for the office of President are: The person must be a natural-born citizen of the United States. They must be at least 35 years old. They must have been a resident of the United States for at least 14 years.
The newly elected French president is sworn into office at most ten days after the result of the election. He cannot take office until the Conseil Constitutionnel (constitutional Court) has validated the election result, a process which takes usually three to four days.
1 George Washington is to be president
It was US President Theodore Roosevelt who believed that the office of the vice presidency was simply not worth having. Most constitutional scholars agree but the question then remains how to handle the situation if a president cannot serve out the term. There have been several alternate proposals such as having the Speaker of the House assume the office of the presidency, and currently the Speaker is number three on the list should the vice president be unable to complete the term inherited by the president.
The President, the Vice President and the First Secretary.
No. There was only one president who had three terms-- Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But after he died in office during his third term, a constitutional amendment (the 22nd) was passed that limited all presidents to two terms.
Yes. That's actually one of the three Constitutional requirements for President.
-Executive(President) -Legislative(Congress) -Judicial(Decides whether laws are constitutional or not)
FDR. Three terms.
he was the second president
Those are the Constitutional eligibility requirements for the office of President.
Constitutional Amendments do not require the President's approval, but rather that of three fourths of the States.