Each party's Presidential nominee (or incumbent) selects a running mate for an election.
If a Vice President leaves office, the sitting President can nominate a replacement to be confirmed by the Congress.
Vice-presidential candidates are nominated by the national convention that nominates the president. The presidential candidates is chosen first and lately he tells the convention whom he wants, but this has not always been the case and may not always be the case in the future.
The president nominates supreme court justices. (also "technically" the president selects the vice president "after" he is elected, so the president "sort-of" nominates the vice president too.) . Hope that helps.
Congress must approve such a nomination.
When a vice president becomes president, he nominates a new vice president who is sworn in after a confirmation vote by a majority of both houses of congress.
The speaker of the House becomes the Vice President.
The Vice President runs with the President as a team. If the original Vice President dies or cannot serve after taking office, the President nominates a new VP, but the Senate has to confirm.
No, the President nominates a new Vice President. The nomination must be approved by a majority vote in both Houses of Congress.
The Presidents nominates someone who upon approval by both houses of Congress becomes the vice-president.
The candidate for vice-president is nominated at the same national convention that nominates the presidential candidate.
In the event of the death of the Vice President, the President nominates a new Vice President, who gets sworn in and takes office as soon as a majority of each House of Congress approves the nomination.
The candidate for vice-president is nominated at the same national convention that nominates the presidential candidate.
there is no vice-president in France, but a prime minister - position currently (2010) held by François Fillon.
If both the president and vice president die, the Speaker of the House of Representatives becomes the President of the United States. The new president nominates someone to become the new vice president, and he or she will assume the office of vice president after both houses of Congress confirm the nomination by a majority vote.