We cannot answer this question unless you tell us the choices that you were given. And an aside from a professor: when teachers give you these kinds of questions, they hope you will do the assignment yourself, rather than asking us to do it for you.
This second straight display of vice presidential political muscle finally caused Congress and the states to rectify the weakness of the Constitution's provision governing the office; the nation officially recognized the reality of party tickets in presidential elections and passed an amendment overtly pairing presidential and vice presidential candidates on one ballot in the electoral college. No vice president would become president via election until the twentieth century. After 1801 the office of vice president held little political power for a hundred years.
If Mitt Romney will be the next president, then America will change to the strong and rich America
Multiple-choice questions only work when the choices are actually listed.
No, there are no presidents or vice presidents from Colorado.
The presidents either died or resigned, and their vice presidents took office, or the vice presidents were elected on their own.
No. No vice-presidents nor Presidents have come from Utah as of 2014.
to help presidents out
Yes, both.
1
Four U. S. Presidents had no Vice President:John TylerMillard FillmoreAndrew JohnsonChester A. Arthur
Gerald Ford
The possessive form of the plural noun vice presidents is vice presidents'.Example: We rarely remember the vice presidents' wivesunless they become first ladies.
There are 18 Vice Presidents world wide.
The possessive form of the plural noun vice presidents is vice presidents'.Example: We rarely remember the vice presidents' wivesunless they become first ladies.
The reason that there have been four more U. S. Vice Presidents than there have been U. S. Presidents is due to the eleven Presidents who did not have just one Vice President. Four Presidents, Tyler, Fillmore, A. Johnson and Arthur, had no Vice President (a 4-VP shortage). Six Presidents, Madison, Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland, McKinley and Nixon, each had two Vice Presidents (a 6-VP surplus). One President, Franklin Roosevelt, had three Vice Presidents (a 2-VP surplus). Six extra plus two extra minus four short equals four extra.