In the United States, there is no age requirement for individuals to be appointed to certain positions, such as federal judges or cabinet members. While specific elected offices, like the presidency or Senate, have age minimums, appointive roles do not have a standardized age limit, allowing younger individuals to be appointed based on qualifications and experience. However, specific organizations or local governments may set their own age guidelines for appointed positions.
21
21 or older
President appoint the chief election commisioner officer.
To appoint a new president.
21 years old. Not until 1971 did it change to 18.
state rep: 25 years or older of age at time of election, reside in the state of representation, be a citizen for 7 yrs, win election :) Senator: 30 years of age or older at time of election, be a citzen for 9 yrs, reside in state that he or she is running in, win the election :)
Anyone 16 years of age and older without a criminal record can vote by secret ballot. Votes/ballots are not counted publicly.
The age requirement to vote in a national election varies by country. In the United States, the minimum voting age is 18. Other countries may have different minimum ages, such as 16 in some countries like Austria and Brazil.
The Governor can appoint someone to take his place until the next Federal election comes about.
If there is a vacancy in the Senate the Governor will appoint a temporary senator until the next election.
The minimum age requirement is 18 years.
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