The two presidents that returned to Congress after serving as US President were John Adams and Andrew Johnson. Adams served in the House of Representatives from 1830 until 1846. Johnson only attended one session before he died.
The US President must be a US citizen, naturally born on US soil. Congress does not have this requirement.
THE president is elected by the electrol college. Congress is elected by the people
John C Calhoun
John C. Calhoun resigned as vice president late in his last term in order to become a US Senator.
There was no confederate congress so there was no president elected from both.
US President James Monroe signed the act of the US Congress that admitted Mississippi into the US. This came about in 1817.
Congress, the President and the US Supreme Court are the leaders of the three branches of the US Government: Congress = Legislative Branch President = Executive Branch Supreme Court = Judicial Branch
He was in the Continental Congress but not the US Congress. The US Congress did not exist before Adams became Vice-President under Washington.
Not the whole Congress. There are nominated by the President and approved by the US Senate.
By Act of Congress (Not the US Constitution) the President's letter of resignation goes to the US Secretary of State.
Citizens, the congress, and the president. Basically the citizens sometimes send the idea in, the congress and president approve it.
In that situation the bill is considered vetoed and is of no effect. This is called the President's "pocket veto." For a bill to become law the President must do two things. He must sign it and return it to Congress within 10 days of passage. A bill, whether signed by the President or not, cannot be returned to Congress if it is in recess. If Congress recesses before the President signs and returns the bill it cannot be returned; therefore the two requirements for a bill to become law cannot be met. When this happens, if Congress wants the bill passed, Congress will introduce another version of the bill, pass it and send it to the President who would then have to formally veto it or sign and return it.