Forty-fifth U.S. Vice President Albert Arnold (Al) Gore, Jr. was in office, January 20, 1993 - January 20, 2001. He served under 42nd U.S. President William Jefferson (Bill) Clinton
Al Gore (born March 31, 1948 in Washington DC) succeeded Dan Quayle as the 45th Vice President of the United States, serving between January 20, 1993 and January 20, 2001, including the whole of 2000. He was succeeded by Dick Cheney in 2001.
Gore lost his bid for the Presidency to George W. Bush in November 2000.
From January 1993 to January 2001, the U. S. President was Bill Clinton and the Vice President was Al Gore.
The major party candidates for U. S. Vice President in the election of 2000 were Republican Dick Cheney and Democrat Joe Lieberman.
There have been nine Presidents who did not win a presidential election before becoming President including four who won presidential elections after becoming President. The Vice Presidents who replaced the first four Presidents to die in office never won a presidential election. The Vice Presidents who replaced the other four Presidents who died in office won re-election at the ends of the terms in which they assumed office. Gerald Ford, however, was appointed to the vice presidency after Vice President Agnew resigned in 1973, and he ascended to the presidency when President Nixon resigned in 1974. He ran for re-election in 1976 but lost to Jimmy Carter, so he never won either a presidential election OR a vice-presidential election.
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As of 2009, Joseph Biden is the 47th US Vice President. Some Presidents have had more than one Vice President, , two vice presidents have served under more than one president (George Clinton and John C. Calhoun) and four (Tyler, Fillmore, A. Johnson, and Arthur) had no Vice President during their successions.
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All US Vice Presidents are not yet dead.
There have been nine Presidents who did not win a presidential election before becoming President including four who won presidential elections after becoming President. The Vice Presidents who replaced the first four Presidents to die in office never won a presidential election. The Vice Presidents who replaced the other four Presidents who died in office won re-election at the ends of the terms in which they assumed office. Gerald Ford, however, was appointed to the vice presidency after Vice President Agnew resigned in 1973, and he ascended to the presidency when President Nixon resigned in 1974. He ran for re-election in 1976 but lost to Jimmy Carter, so he never won either a presidential election OR a vice-presidential election.
There has never been a Jewish US Vice President. The only time that such a thing would have been possible was when Al Gore was running for president in 2000, his vice presidential candidate was Joseph Lieberman, who is Jewish.
Rosemary Dempsey
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Joe Biden is the Vice President elect for the 2008 election.
Never were vice presidentWashingtonMadisonMonroeJ. Q. AdamsJacksonW. H. HarrisonPolkTaylorPierceBuchananLincolnGrantHayesGarfieldClevelandBen. HarrisonMcKinleyTaftWilsonHardingHooverF.D. RooseveltEisenhowerKennedyCarterReaganClintonG. W. BushObama
In voting booths around the US on election day.
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The US vice president Joe Biden, ran for re-election this year and won.