The Vice President
The primary responsibility of the Vice President of the United States is to be ready
at a moment's notice to assume the Presidency if the President is unable to perform
his duties. This can be because of the President's death, resignation, or
temporary incapacitation, or if the Vice President and a majority of the Cabinet
judge that the President is no longer able to discharge the duties of the presidency.
The Vice President is elected along with the President by the Electoral College
- each elector casts one vote for President and another for Vice President.
Before the ratification of the 12th Amendment in 1804, electors only voted for President,
and the person who received the second greatest number of votes became Vice President.
The Vice President also serves as the President of the United States Senate, where
he or she casts the deciding vote in the case of a tie. Except in the case
of tiebreaking votes, the Vice President rarely actually presides over the Senate.
Instead, the Senate selects one of their own members, usually junior members of
the majority party, to preside over the Senate each day.
Joseph R. Biden is the 46th Vice President of the United States. Of the 45
previous Vice Presidents, nine have succeeded to the Presidency, and four have been
elected to the Presidency in their own right. The duties of the Vice President,
outside of those enumerated in the Constitution, are at the discretion of the current
President. Each Vice President approaches the role differently - some take
on a specific policy portfolio, others serve simply as a top adviser to the President.
The Vice President has an office in the West Wing of the White House, as well as
in the nearby Eisenhower Executive Office Building. Like the President, he
also maintains an official residence, at the United States Naval Observatory in
Northwest Washington, D.C. This peaceful mansion, has been the official home
of the Vice President since 1974 - previously, Vice Presidents had lived in their
own private residences. The Vice President also has his own limousine, operated
by the United States Secret Service, and flies on the same aircraft the President
uses - but when the Vice President is aboard, the craft are referred to as Air Force
Two and Marine Two.
Biography
Biographical information about our current vice president.
Salary and Benefits
The Vice President's salary is the same as that of the Chief Justice of the United
States and the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives which, for 2010, is
set at $227,300. The salary was set by the 1989 Government Salary Reform Act
which also provides for an automatic cost of living adjustment for federal employees.
The Vice President does not automatically receive a pension based on that office,
but instead receives the same pension as other members of Congress based on his
position as president of the Senate. The Vice President must serve a minimum
of five years to qualify for a pension.