I believe that answer is a yes because of the fact that 12th Amendment (last sentence) says
But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.
and Article II, Section 1 (5th paragraph)
"No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States." and Lastly 22nd Amendment (first sentence)
"No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once."
Two U. S. Vice Presidents each served under two Presidents.
George Clinton was Thomas Jefferson's second Vice President and James Madison's first Vice President.
John C. Calhoun was John Quincy Adams' Vice President and Andrew Jackson's first Vice President.
Yes, this has happened several times. Jefferson's first term VP, Aaron Burr got into trouble and was replaced by George Clinton for his second term. Clinton continued as VP under Madison, but died before Madison's first term ended and so had to be replaced. Andrew Jackson started out with John J. Calhoun as his VP but they did not get along and Calhoun resigned late in Jackson's first term , so Jackson chose Van Buren for his second term. Lincoln chose a new running mate for his second term, Cleveland's VP died and Cleveland chose a new running mate but lost his re-election bid. He had a new running mate the next time when he won. McKinley's first VP died and so Theodore Roosevelt ran with him the second time. Franklin Roosevelt kept the same VP for his first two terms but had different ones for his last two terms. Nixon's VP barely made it into his second term before he resigned due to a criminal investigation.
You don't need any specific skills to be a vice president. You should have had some history in politics and know the background of past presidents.
There were not any presidents born in MontanaRead more: Were_any_presidents_born_in_Montana
The U.S. vice president is first in line to fill the president's unexpired term if the office becomes vacant for any reason.
They serve at the pleasure of the President. He can dismiss them at any time. Cabinet members do not have term limits
No president has served a term that was split. Grover Cleveland, served two separate terms, which were split by four years served by another president, Benjamin Harrison..
Joe Biden hasn't yet.
Prior to 1967, anytime a president died in office his vice president took the office of president and did not have a vice president for the remainder of that term. Until the ratification of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, there was no requirement to replace a vice president. For example, Chester Arthur served out the rest of President Garfield's term without a vice president.There have been many occasions in which a President did not have a vice president during one of his terms. For example, Franklin Pierce did not have a vice president for almost all of his term. His vice president, William R. King, died after only 45 days in office.(see the related question)(see Sources and related links below for a complete listing of all of the presidents and their vice presidents, including periods in which they had no vice president)
No one - there are no vice presidents in any of the 50 states.
Yes. John C. Calhoun was vice-president under John Quincy Adams and stayed for most of Andrew Jackson's first term.
No U. S. President of Vice President was born in Wisconsin or represented Wisconsin to date.
No- no US president has been from West Virginia. Further, none of Virginia presidents lived in that part of Virginia that became the state of West Virginia.
No, there are no presidents or vice presidents from Colorado.
There has been one U. S. Vice President from Delaware to date:Joe Biden
The answer is three. This situation occurs if a president leaves office without completing his term and the vice-president who takes over does not continue in office.
You don't need any specific skills to be a vice president. You should have had some history in politics and know the background of past presidents.
No. No vice-presidents nor Presidents have come from Utah as of 2014.
Oklahoma has been neither the birth state nor the home state of any U. S. Vice President to date.