The head of state in Ireland is the president. The current president (June 2011) is Mary McAleese, whose term will end later in 2011. Ireland does not have a vice president, so there is no vice leader of Ireland. The head of government, known as a Taoiseach, has a deputy, known as a Tánaiste, but neither of these can be considered the vice leader of the country.
The term vice-president is not used. The position is called the deputy leader. As of the 7th of March 2015, the deputy leader of Fine Gael is James Reilly.
No.
Ireland does not have a vice president. No such office exists. Ireland just has a president. If a president dies or resigns a new president is chosen.
No. President Barrack Obama is the leader of the government. Vice President Joe Biden is the leader of the Senate.
The majority leader is the leader of the Senate.
the leader of the senate is the Vice President
the leader is usually the vice president or the president
the vice President of the US
The Chief of Staff of the Defence Forces in Ireland is Vice Admiral Mark Mellett.
The Vice President.
The Leader of the Senate is always the Vice-President. And if the Vice-President isn't there, then the President pro-tempore(temporary President) is in charge.
The President of Ireland is Michael D Higgins, but the office of President is largely symbolic. The leader of Government (or Taoiseach) is Enda Kenny