No. Dick Cheney was Vice-President under George W. Bush, making him President of the Senate, the other body of Congress.
John Boehner is a Republican Party Representative in the U.S. House of Representatives from the 8th district of Ohio. He is slated to be the next Speaker of the House when the next Congress convenes
A House Member employs an average of 14 staff; the Senate average is 34. House Members may not exceed 18 full-time staff, and 4 part-time. Senators have no limit on the number of staff they can hire. Their staff budget depends on the size of the population of the state they represent – California Senators get a lot more money for staff than do the Senators from Montana, for example. Each Member of Congress can distribute staff among their Washington and District/State offices as they wish.
Speaker of the House John Boehner reportedly is an alcoholic. Reports say he smells of alcohol, acts inappropriately at times, and says and does things that a normal person would not do.
No. Deportation means you have been captured and moved back to your home country. Denial means you've never entered. You have a better chance of entering the country after a denial than if you've been deported.
"John Andrew Boehner" (also known as "John Boehner") is known as the current "Speaker of the United States House of Representatives". Boehner was born November 17, 1949 in Reading, Ohio.
No. John Boehner, the Speaker of the House, is not a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church). He is a Roman Catholic.
He was given an honorable discharge. It was an administrative seperation for medical reasons. His biography lists the reason as a "bad back". This hints to me that Mr. Boehner simply was unable to adjust to the military lifestyle and was discharged during his basic training rather than saddle some command with another cry baby.
Gee, what a loaded question. The answer appears to be no, since he hasn't been so far. As I recall, the cost of that defense has been $2 million so far.
Freshman Congressmen in the 111th Congress include Glen Nye (D) from the second District, Tom Perriello (D) from the fifth District and Gerry Connolly (D) representing the eleventh District.