The original concept in the US Constitution was that the Presidential candidate with a majority of electoral votes would become President, while the second-place candidate became Vice President, with each elector casting 2 votes for two different persons. However, problems with a tie (1800) and with partisan conflicts between the President and his Vice President, prompted the 12th Amendment (ratified 1804) whereby the President and Vice President are elected on separate ballots. Although some Vice Presidents may have had differences with the President, none has since been elected from a different party.
Under the current system in the US, the president and the vice president are ALWAYS from the same party (this has not always been the case; in the first few elections the person receiving the most votes became President and the person receiving the second highest number of votes became Vice President, meaning that it was possible and perhaps even likely that they would have opposing viewpoints). Our current President Obama and Vice President Biden are democrats.
The Speaker of the House of Representatives
If the VP dies first, the president would choose a new VP. If the president dies first,. the VP would become president and then would choose a new VP. If the president and VP both die at the same time, the Speaker of the House would become president and then he would choose a new VP.
Not likely . If the president dies, the VP would become the president and he would nominate someone to be the new vice president. He would choose someone from his own party and the Congress would not likely reject a nominee just because he was from the same party as the president. If his nominee was rejected he could keep submitting names until he found someone Congress would agree to.
if the vice president died the president would remain the same....
The two run as a team, with the same party affiliiation. The same electors choose both and the electors are chosen as representatives of the winning party are the state level.
becuse adams and jefferson where against each other
becuse adams and jefferson where against each other
The Twelfth Amendment under the current party system guarantees that the president and vice president will be from the same party.
They run as a team and are both elected by the same electors who have pledged to support their candidacy. The only way they could not be from the same party would be if no candidate received a majority of the electoral vote so the House of Representatives chose the President and the Senate chose the Vice-President.
They run as a team and are both elected by the same electors who have pledged to support their candidacy. The only way they could not be from the same party would be if no candidate received a majority of the electoral vote so the House of Representatives chose the President and the Senate chose the Vice-President.
The Vice President runs in tandem with the President and is of the same political party. Either or both houses of Congress can be controlled by an opposing party and they choose their own leaders. The Vice President is the presiding officer of the US Senate and can vote in the case of a tie .
No, they have to be of the same political party.
Because if the President and the VP were of differentparties, they would always have conflicting views. Being in the same party, they will agree more.
No, when the president is running for office. They have the opportunity then to pick who they want as their running mate and eventual vice president. Much like right now with Obama and Biden, they stay within the same political party.
The Vice President of the United States is the President of the Senate. There is no Vice President of the Senate. He has the power to cast a deciding vote to break ties, and is present when the electoral college votes are counted.
They always have been from the same party. The political parties nominate a ticket to run together. It makes it easier to make decisions and to carry out functions of government when they come from the same party.