When was Joe Biden Vice President and the number of time has one ended up being President?

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    Joe Biden

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    Joe Biden is not the very first previous Vice President to take the Presidency (Picture: Getty Images)

    Joe Biden will become the 46th President of the United States after being named winner of the election over Donald Trump.

    Biden, who at 77 is the oldest person ever to be elected President, said in a statement that he would be ‘a President for all Americans’, and will ‘keep the faith that you have placed in me’.

    Of course he’s come close to the Presidency before, having previously served as Vice President.

    But when did he hold that titles, and how many Vice Presidents have gone on to secure the top job?

    When was Joe Biden Vice President of the US?

    Joe Biden was Vice President of the US under the Obama administration.

    He was the country’s 47th Vice President, holding the post from January 20 2009, when Obama was inaugurated as President, until January 20 2017, when Donald Trump took over the keys to the White House.

    Prior to becoming Vice President, he was the US Senator for Delaware, holding the post from 1973 until 2009.

    Although he is the oldest person ever to be elected President ,the 77-year-old was one of the youngest people ever to become a senator, aged just 29 when he was elected in 1972.

    He was re-elected to the Senate six times before resigning to become Vice President following the 2008 US election – having also previously attempted to run for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1988 and again in 2008.

    How many Vice Presidents have gone on to become US President?

    Prior to Joe Biden, 14 other Vice presidents have gone on to become US President.

    They are as follows:

    John Adams (1789–1797 – President from 1797-1801)

    Thomas Jefferson (1797–1801 – President from 1801-1809)

    Martin Van Buren (1833–1837 – President from 1837-1841)

    John Tyler (1841 – President from 1841-1845)

    Millard Fillmore (1849-1850 – President from 1850-1853)

    FILE - In this June 5, 1989 file photo, U.S. President George H.W. Bush holds a news conference at the White House in Washington where he condemned the Chinese crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Bush died at the age of 94 on Friday, Nov. 30, 2018, about eight months after the death of his wife, Barbara Bush. (AP Photo/Marcy Nighswander, File)

    George H W Bush was the last Vice President turned President not to get a second term (Picture: AP)

    Andrew Johnson (1865 – President from 1865-1859)

    Chester Arthur (1881 – President from 1881-1885)

    Theodore Roosevelt (1901 – President from 1901-1909)

    Calvin Coolidge (1921-1923 – President from 1923-1929)

    Harry S Truman (1945 – President from 1945-1953)

    Lyndon B Johnson (1961-1963 – President from 1963-1969)

    Richard Nixon (1953-1961 – President from 1969-1974)

    Gerald Ford (1973-1974 – President from 1974-1977)

    George H W Bush (1981-1989 – President from 1989-1993)

    Joe Biden is only the second Vice President who has not taken on the role of President directly from his term as VP – the only other person was Richard Nixon who was Vice President alongside President Dwight D Eisenhower before he took office eight years later.

    Out of the 14 prior to Biden, nine of them became President after the existing President either died or resigned, while five of those (John Adams, Martin Van Buren, Andrew Johnson, Chester Arthur, Gerald Ford) were not re-elected as President at the following election.

    George H W Bush was the last Vice President turned President who only held office for a single term, before Bill Clinton won the ticket to the White House in 1992.


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