Arabin presidential line of succession: Difference between revisions
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| [[Arabin Secretary of State|Secretary of State]] | | [[Arabin Secretary of State|Secretary of State]] | ||
| | | Charles Knox | ||
| style="background: {{Republican Party (Arabi)/meta/color}}" | | | style="background: {{Republican Party (Arabi)/meta/color}}" | | ||
| [[Republican Party (Arabi)|Republican]] | | [[Republican Party (Arabi)|Republican]] | ||
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| [[Arabin Attorney General|Attorney General]] | | [[Arabin Attorney General|Attorney General]] | ||
| | | Edward Hopkins | ||
| style="background: {{Republican Party (Arabi)/meta/color}}" | | | style="background: {{Republican Party (Arabi)/meta/color}}" | | ||
| [[Republican Party (Arabi)|Republican]] | | [[Republican Party (Arabi)|Republican]] |
Latest revision as of 20:09, 6 August 2023
The Arabin presidential line of succession is the order in which officials of the Arabin federal government assume the powers and duties of the office of president of Arabi if the incumbent president becomes incapacitated, dies, resigns, or is removed from office (via impeachment by the House of Representatives and subsequent conviction in a trial by the Senate).
Currently only 4 people are eligible in the line of succession since most of the cabinet secretaries are currently in an acting position.
No. | Office | Incumbent | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Vice President | Matthew Boyle | Republican | |
2 | Speaker of the House of Representatives | James Young | Republican | |
3 | Senate Vice President | Andrew Clegg | Republican | |
4 | Secretary of State | Charles Knox | Republican | |
5 | Secretary of Defense | David Meltzer | Republican | |
6 | Attorney General | Edward Hopkins | Republican | |
7 | Secretary of the Treasury | Patrick Perry | Republican | |
8 | Secretary of Health and Human Services | Nathan Hardy | Republican | |
9 | Secretary of Education | Kimberly Hodge | Republican | |
10 | Secretary of Labor | Adam Winter | Republican | |
11 | Secretary of Agriculture | Michael Arnold | Republican | |
12 | Secretary of Energy | Corey Young | Republican |
History
Originally only the vice president was able to succeed the president in the case of death, resignation, or impeachment and removal of office by conviction. In 1841, two years after the constitution was in force, Congress passed the Presidential Succession Act of 1841 which established an official line of succession. The line of succession included the Speaker of the House of Representatives as second in line and the Senate Vice President as third in line. In 1874, Congress passed the Presidential Succession Act of 1874 which included the Secretaries in the order of which their respective departments were created. It also included that any departments created subsequent to the passage of that bill that departments secretary shall be added to the line of succession. Since then, Congress has not made any changes to the presidential line of succession.