Does an official HAVE to give up their elected position if they move to another?

So, Obama resigned from his Senate seat today so he can be President. But, is there a law stating he HAD to do it. I can’t imagine being a President AND a Senator would be easy but it would certainly give him an advantage as far as pushing legislation. So, does he have to or is it just tradition?

He has to. The constitution says that you can’t hold both positions at the same time.

It’s a Constitutional requirement: Art I Sec 6. provides:

Well that sucks. Thanks for the quick reply guys, love the Dope.

Not just federal government, either. The great state of Missouri has the same requirement, and specifically mentions military commissions as well as civil offices.

Don’t know why it would suck at all. It’s part of the checks and balances in our Constitution. You can’t serve two different branches of the government at the same time.

Following on from that question–is it possible to be a Senator and a Representative at the same time? Or a Congressman and a State officer of some kind?

What is the law in Maryland, where Beau Biden is the state attorney general but is currently serving in the Delaware Army National Guard?

Here’s the Australian equivalent

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/cth/consol_act/coaca430/s44.html

where you can be in the army or navy but not a traitor, dual citizen or bankrupt

And, yet, the VP does it all the time. :slight_smile:

(Yeah, I know, it’s in the Constitution that this is an exception…)

Zev Steinhardt

So, assuming no State law against it, could a person be a U.S. Senator and Governor of a state at the same time?

New Jersey just recently adopted a law banning the previously common practice of state legislators serving in local municipal offices, though a number of legislators remain grandfathered in.