The chief justice of the supreme court administers the oath in normal times.
No, the President's Oath is written in the Constitution. The Vice President's Oath is the same oath that members of Congress take and was not written in the Constitution, but the Constitution does require that the VP be bound by an Oath.
It is a oath that makes you the president
The inaugural oath of office. Before the President-Elect takes the oath, he is not the President. After he takes the oath, he is President.
President
Theodore Roosevelt took the oath to be President after William McKinley was assassinated in 1901.
No, the president is not the Oath Of Office.
The constitution requires that before a President can assume their duties they have to take the oath of office. The oath is administered at the official ceremony, the inauguration. When the incoming President speaks the final words of the oath, their Presidency begins and the former President's term in office is officially over.
James MonroeThe first president to take the oath was George Washington.
We watched as the new president took the oath of office.
The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India administers the oath to the office of the President of India.
The outgoing President's term ends at noon, and the President-Elect automatically becomes President at the same time regardless of whether or not he's taken the oath of office. HOWEVER, he cannot act as President, or in effect "execute the office of President of the United States" until he's taken the oath. For example, the Vice-President normally takes his oath before the President. Assuming the VP's been sworn in a few moments before noon, he would constitutionally be "Acting President" until the President takes his oath.
I think the president becomes official at NOON the day of inauguration, whether he takes the oath or not.