In 1896, President William McKinley defeated the Democratic candidate, William Jennings Bryan. In 1900, he defeated William Jennings Bryan again.
No he doesn't their not pat of the same game
Uh...the same way you can tell if you are heterosexual. If you are gay you are a male who is sexually/romantically attracted to other males. If you are a lesbian you are a female who is sexually/romantically attracted to other females.
A gay person is someone who is romantically or intimately attracted to members of the same sex.
you love someone that is the same gender as you romantically or you have no appeal for the opposite sex
Constitutionally, there are no requirements that the two must agree. However, politically speaking, the two probably share much the same views or the President would not have nominated the OMB Cirector in the first place.
You are gay if you are sexually and/or romantically attracted to the same sex. That is the only way you can know.
No. A lesbian is a woman who is sexually/romantically interested in other women. Used to be that gay was used for men who were sexually/romantically intersted in men, but today gay is often used the same way as homosexual - meaning someone of either sex who is sexually/romantically interested in the same sex and not the opposite.
The original system pretty much ensured that the Vice President and President would not be of the same ideology, since there was only one vote: whoever won was President, whoever came in second (most likely an opponent) was the Vice President. The system now votes for them separately, so it's much more likely (though, in the case of faithless electors, not absolutely assured) that the two will come from the same party.
Yes, the same for a vice-president.
foe and opponent
enemy, opposer, rival, opponent