The US Constitution mandates 3 requirements to becoming a senator. First, the candidate must be at least 30 years old. Second, the candidate must be a resident of their election state. Thirdly, the candidate must have been a citizen of the United States of America for at least the past nine years before the election.
One is you must be an american by birth, two must be 30yrs and above, 3 absence of criminal record
They live in the state where they run, they are 27 years old, and are a citizen for 7 years.
Yes.
The Three requirements one must meet before becoming a member of the Senate are one you have to be at least 30 years old. Second, a U.S. citizen for at least nine years at the time of election to the Senate. And third, a resident of the state one is elected to represent in the Senate.
Currently in 2017, Oklahoma has three members in the House of Representatives and two members in the US Senate.
It is the U.S. Congress. Congress has 2 houses: Senate and House of Representatives . Senate has 100 members ( 2 members per state ). House of Representatives has 435 members
There are three basic requirements for election to the senate. First is age. A senator must be at least 30 years old. A senator must be a US citizen for at least 9 years before election. Finally, a senator must reside in the state he represents.
Ambassadors, Federal judges and Cabinet members fall into this category.
Simply stated the Constitution established three branches of government: executive, legislative, and judicial. And it further divided the legislative branch into the House of Representative and the Senate. That's their proper names, which is why they are capitalized. And that's your answer. Members of the Senate are called Senators because they belong to the Senate. They are not called Representatives because they do not belong to the House of Representatives.
Senate
That both the House of Representatives and the Senate need to have two out of three members vote in favor of something.
* The House of Representatives has 150 members, elected for a three-year term in proportional single-seat constituencies with a system of alternative vote known as preferential voting. * The Senate has 76 members
From Congressional Research Service (March 1, 2011): "As has been true in recent Congresses, the vast majority of Members (92% of House Members and 99% of Senators) at the beginning of the 112th Congress held bachelor's degrees. The CQ Roll Call Member Profiles indicate that 26 Members of the House and 1 Senator have no educational degree beyond a high school diploma. Seven Members of the House, but no Senators, have associate's degrees as their highest degree, and one House Member has an LPN (nursing) degree. Eighty-three Members of the House and 16 Senators earned a master's degree as their highest educational degree. Law degrees are held by 167 Members of the House (38% of the total House) and 55 Senators (55% of the total Senate). Of the Members holding a law degree, four (three House Members and one Senator) also hold an LLM (Master of Laws) degree. Eighteen Representatives (but no Senators) have doctoral (Ph.D.) degrees, and 20 Members of the House and 4 Senators have a medical degree."
Minimum and maximum requirements: three straight lines meeting pairwise. Minimum and maximum requirements: three straight lines meeting pairwise. Minimum and maximum requirements: three straight lines meeting pairwise. Minimum and maximum requirements: three straight lines meeting pairwise.