Yes! The Vice President, the the Speaker of the House. This is the current line of succession:
http://www.patriotstoolbox.org/america/presidentiallineofsuccession.htm
If the Vice-President dies, the President remains President.
If the President dies, the Vice-President becomes the acting President.
the vice president
The Presidential Succession Act of 1947. This gives clear order to who would become president if the President and Vice President where to die or be incapacitated and unable to perform the duties of president.
The Speaker of the House of Representatives, currently Nancy Pelosi
No. It is quite unlikely that this would ever happen. When the Vice President becomes President, a new Vice President is selected and becomes next in line. Only if the new President were to die before a new Vice President was selected would the Speaker of the House become President. Then a new Vice President and a new Speaker would be selected and they would both be ahead of the President Pro Tempore in the order of ascendence. The Secretary of State would become President only if the President, Vice President, Speaker, and President Pro Tempore all died at essentially the same time.
The President appoints a new VP with Congress's approval. If the President and VP were to both die or leave office suddenly, then the Speaker of the House of Representatives becomes president and a new VP is appointed. The order of presidential succession goes: President VP Speaker of the House President Pro-tempore of the Senate Cabinet (by order of when the positions were established)
The Vice president
The vice president.
vice president
The Vice President
vice president
The Speaker of the House becomes the president if both the President and Vice President should die. As of 2014, the Speaker of the House is John Boehner.
vice president
Vice President
The Vice-President.
The vice president shall be the president in a case that the original president might die.
the vice president
secretary of state