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  1. Aug 1, 2024 · He went on to run and win in 2020. Three modern vice presidents have won their party’s nomination but lost the general election. In 1948, FDR’s third-term vice president, Henry Wallace, was the Progressive Party nominee. Jimmy Carter’s vice president, Walter Mondale, secured the 1984 Democratic nomination. And in 2000, Al Gore, Bill ...

    • Katherine Schaeffer
  2. 19 hours ago · On 6 January 1989 Vice President George H. W. Bush presided over a joint session of Congress to count the vote in the Electoral College and declare the winner of the presidential election of November 1988. He concluded his restrained remarks with a wry smile as the figures confirmed him as the 43 rd president of the United States.

    • From Different Parties
    • Unlikely Scenario
    • What The Constitution Says
    • Separating The Vote

    Still, there's nothing in the U.S. Constitution, particularly the 12th Amendment, that prevents a Republican from choosing a Democratic running mate or a Democrat from choosing a Green Party politician as her vice presidential candidate. In fact, one of the nation's modern-day presidential nominees came very close to selecting a running mate who wa...

    Sidney M. Milkis and Michael Nelson, the authors of "The American Presidency: Origins and Development, 1776–2014," describe a “new emphasis on loyalty and competence and the new care invested in the selection process” as a reason presidential nominees choose a running mate with similar positions from the same party.

    Before the adoption of the 12th Amendment in 1804, voters chose presidents and vice presidents separately. When a president and vice president were from opposing parties, as Vice President Thomas Jefferson and President John Adams were in the late 1700s, many thought the split provided a system of checks and balances just within the executive branc...

    States could, in fact, allow separate votes for a president and vice president. Vikram David Amar, dean of the University of Illinois College of Law and the Iwan Foundation Professor of Law, argues: Still, at present, all states unify the two candidates on one ticket on their ballots, a practice carried out through the November 2020 presidential el...

  3. Dec 7, 2021 · The Vice President is elected because it is constitutionally required, as per the 12th amendment. The reason the Vice President is elected is because, since the VP is first in the line of succession, and that is one of the VP's primary responsibilities, so it was seen as a position that should be elected. Alexander Hamilton outlines this view ...

  4. Four sitting vice presidents have been elected president: John Adams in 1796, Thomas Jefferson in 1800, Martin Van Buren in 1836, and George H. W. Bush in 1988. Likewise, two former vice presidents have won the presidency, Richard Nixon in 1968 and Joe Biden in 2020.

  5. The election of the president and the vice president of the United States is an indirect election in which citizens of the United States who are registered to vote in one of the fifty U.S. states or in Washington, D.C., cast ballots not directly for those offices, but instead for members of the Electoral College. [note 1] These electors then ...

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  7. Jan 5, 2021 · On Dec. 14, as electors gathered across the country to cast their ballots, Joseph R. Biden Jr. had earned 306 electoral votes, 36 more than needed to win. President Trump had earned 232 electoral ...

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