Geraldine Ferraro (1984) and Sarah Palin (2008)
Victoria Woodhull 1872, Mary Kennery 1952.
Sarah Pailn & Your Mom
maylin and Nicole
No, he was not vice president or even a governor. He did serve two terms in Congress and ran for governor of Ohio.
The president and vice president ran together in elections.
The only two women to make a serious run at the vice-presidency so far were Geraldine Ferraro (with Walter Mondale) and Sarah Palin (with John McCain).
Yes. Richard M. Nixon originally ran for President in 1960 after serving two terms as Dwight D. Eisenhower's Vice-President, but lost to John F. Kennedy. Nixon ran again and won in 1968.
Yes. The Constitution has no limitation to serving as Vice President... only President. That limitation is two elected terms or 10 years. As a recent example, Vice President Bush served for two full terms under Reagan before running and winning the Presidency. He also ran for a second term against Clinton but lost. VP Gore served two terms and ran after that for Presidency and won (but still lost)... but thats another story. The real question you should be asking,however, is whether a President who has served two terms or 10 years can then serve as Vice President. The Answer to that is NO although that has never been tested. The 12th Amendment states "no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States."
When Walter Mondale ran for Vice President in 1976 and 1980, he was Jimmy Carter's running mate. When he ran for President in 1984, his running mate was Geraldine Ferraro (that was the first of two times to date that a woman was one of the major party Vice Presidential candidates).
There are not any duties of the President that are shared by the Vice President and the President can not perform any of the Vice President's two duties.
There are two official roles for the vice president. The two official roles of vice president are to take on the responsibility of president in the event he is unable to perform his duties, and to preside over the Senate.
Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic) in 1984 and Sarah Palin (Republican) in 2008.
In 1796, when John Adams was elected President, the Vice Presidency went to his opponent, Thomas Jefferson. At that time, instead of electing the Vice President separately, whoever finished second in the Presidential election became Vice President, and Jefferson received more votes than Adams' running mate, Thomas Pinckney.In 1864, when Republican President Abraham Lincoln ran for reelection, instead of running with his Vice President, Hannibal Hamlin, again, he ran with Democrat Andrew Johnsonas National Union Party candidates.
If the President dies, the Vice President must take his places. The Vice President is the President of the United States Senate.