President Warren G. Harding famously declared, "I am not fit for this office and should never have been here."
No person who is not elligible to be President can become Vice-President. No person may be elected more than twice to the office of President. There is disagreement as to whether this prevents a former President from serving as a Vice-President, since he would not have been elected to the office of President should he succeed to that office due to the death or disability of the President. But he clearly would be prevented from running for election after filling out the remainder of the term of a President who died in office.
Lincoln was the president who was antislavery. He believd all slaves should be free so he passed the endoclamation proclaimation thing and declared slaves free.
The Vice President could become Acting President in the event of Presidential disability, and there is no codified term. A new Vice President would not be nominated. Should the Vice President succeed to the Presidency, then he would serve out the remainder of that President's term, and a new Vice President would ordinarily be nominated to fill the Vice President's unexpired term.
The President of the United States cannot be criminally indicted while in office due to a legal interpretation of the Constitution and Department of Justice guidelines, which suggest that a sitting president should not face criminal prosecution to avoid disrupting the executive branch's functioning. This principle is rooted in the belief that the president needs to perform their duties without the distraction of criminal proceedings. However, this does not grant immunity from prosecution after leaving office.
Martin Luther never declared that anyone should be made a saint. Martin Luther believed that all believers in God were saints.
The 25th Amendment !
Yes it should be capitalized.
Their choice of vice-president would take office as the new president if the president-elect should die.
The vice president takes office if the president dies.
The Vice-President.
When writing "president's office," it should be written in lowercase unless it is part of a specific title or name, such as "the President's Office of the United States." In general use, you would say "the president's office" to refer to the office associated with a president without capitalizing. If you are using it in a formal context or as part of a title, capitalize appropriately.
Should the President die in office, or otherwise no longer be able to serve, then the Vice President moves up.
Vice president, speaker of the house, etc.
speaker of the house
the speaker of the house :)
Yes, the president should be subject to civil trials because in the Constitution of the United States....
Because of his watergate scandal