The first was Warren G. Harding. The others were John F. Kennedy, and James Abraham Garfield.
US senators never elect the US president. Possibly some future senators or ex-senators once served as electors.
Jobs that put you in a place to make decisions for others, Mayor, Governor, Senators, Presidents.
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No, though many presidents were previously governors (including Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush). Many other presidents were senators or vice-presidents.
Senators are elected by the people.
Senators are elected by the voters of the State in which they reside.
The legislatires of the states rather than the people elected the Senators under Article I, Section 3, Clauses 1 and 2 of the original Constitution. The Seventeenth Amendment changed that to provide that Senators be elected by the direct vote of the people.
Senators and Representatives are elected by a
All senators are elected. There are no senators that are appointed to the position. This is true for both state and federal senators.
1/3 of the Senators' terms expire in every 2 years, but since there are 50 states with two Senators apiece and that does not divide by 3, in two election years 34 Senators are elected (or re-elected) and in the third year the remaining 32.
The state Legislature elected the Senators be for the 17th admendment.
On every full moon, senators have to be relocated, and new senators have to be voted in. So, generally, about every month we have new senators.