Legal schollars are not agreed on this point, but there is no explicit limit in the Constitution to how many terms a person may be elected to the office of Vice-President. The two term limit applies only to the office of President. YES they can
The president, vice-president and federal judges can be removed from office for committing crimes. First the person must be officially charged with a crime or crimes, this is called impeachment, and then the person must stand trial in the Senate where a conviction requires a 2/3 vote. Members of Congress, however, are not subject to this process.
President John F. Kennedy had a Rocking Chair in the oval office. He had a bad back from a war injury, and sitting in the chair gave him relief from the pain.
If the president cannot perform his duties for any reason the Vice President assumes the Presidency. If the Vice President cannot perform the Speaker of the House assumes the duties of the President
The U.S. Constitution states that naturalized citizens can not run for the office of President. It is the only office that must be held by a natural-born American citizen.
If an incumbent president is willing and qualified to run for reelection, his party does not contest his nomination, most likely because of the message that would be interpreted if the party does not support its incumbent president. However, that was not always the case. Before the Civil War, several incumbent presidents, including Franklin Pierce in 1856, sought but did not receive their parties' nominations for president.
By running for office when the election comes.
No specific gender is required if running for office. Men and women, both, can run for, and be elected into the office of President.
It isn't "sitting duck" but lame duck. A lame duck is a person in office whose term of office is nearly finished.
I may not understand your question-- a president could be re-elected and so would stay in office for another term after his first term ended.
The president, vice-president and federal judges can be removed from office for committing crimes. First the person must be officially charged with a crime or crimes, this is called impeachment, and then the person must stand trial in the Senate where a conviction requires a 2/3 vote. Members of Congress, however, are not subject to this process.
When a candidate runs for office, he picks a running mate. When that candidate wins, his/her running mate becomes vice president.
a Lame Duck. or A still-in-office-president.
A criminal record does not automatically preclude someone from running for the office of President, however it may prevent that person from running for State office or even voting for themselves.
Only if the salary change was authorized by a previous congress and president in a previous term. Changes to the president's salary can not take place until after the sitting president has left office.
President Vice President The Executive Office of the President The Cabinet www.whitehouse.gov
4 years. He was running against another president so he thought he's not going to be elected again so he left but people liked him as president.
Mitt Romney.