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#1
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Term Limits
One of my facebook "friends" posted this on his wall and be the curious type I went and read it.
https://wwws.whitehouse.gov/petition...ebate/TJg8fxXf I'm not against the idea of Term Limits but with something as intricate and confusing as the politics are in America, do we really want new folks being elected to run this country ever 6-12 years? I shudder to think at the number of Bachmann's that might get elected in such a situation. But I'm tempted to sign it anyway (not that it will change the system mind you.. but at least for support). So what does the electoral brain here in SD country think? Good, bad, even? |
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#2
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Personally, I'm all for term limits.
I think 'new blood' is a good idea. Yeah, you'd get a Bachmann here and there, but they'd be limited to how long they could fuck things up ... and you'd do away with Senator Methuselah on his 25th term, talking into the machine and trying to sponsor bills to boost Green Stamps sales or some shit like that. |
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#3
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I'm against. I don't really see what good it would do, our political system is amaturish enough without going out of our way to find more literal amateurs to put in it.
Plus I think it would incentivize politicians to suck up to rich interests as quickly and as shamelessly as possible, since they know that they'll need a new job in a couple years, know they have limited time to suck up and impress contacts that can get them those jobs and know that even if they alienate voters, they won't be able to use those voters to get re-elected more then once anyways. |
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#4
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I'm against them. We already have a mechanism in place to limit terms: regular elections. And yeah, I know the incumbent has all the advantages and wins most of the time, but there's still the opportunity to boot him or her out every couple of years.
There are few enough GOOD politicians already, I hate to lose them just because they're only allowed to serve two terms or whatever. It's counterproductive. Plus, having to face the voters for re-election makes the politicians more accountable to the voters. Like Simplicio said, office holders with no opportunity for re-election are not accountable to anyone except those they can profit from. |
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#5
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#6
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I recall an editorial cartoon from 1995 or so (after the "Contract With America" Republican midterm wins) -- an elephant in a wedding tux, in a carriage with a "Just Married" banner, wearing an innocent "Who, me?" rolleyes expression, is kicking to the curb an astonished bride labeled "Term Limits."
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#7
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We've had term limits in the California legislature for a couple of decades now and, in my opinion, its been a disaster.
Sure, we get a lot of new blood all the time. But mostly these are inexperienced dumpkopfs who don't know how the heck to run a government. Anyone with a little bit of knowledge about how to get things done shuttles from the Assembly to the State Senate, or vice-versa, until they are completely termed out. As for the idea that term limits would reduce polarization, that's the biggest laugh of all. Since the newbies have no history for the voters to look at, the only thing they can point to is their political party. So they act as partisan as possible. The legislatature has never been as polarized as it is now. |
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#8
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Maybe I'm a bit hypocritical, as I oppose term limits...except for the 22nd Amendment, limiting the President to two terms... I treasure the memory of FDR, but, really, he shouldn't have... Hubris to think that only he could lead during WWII...
The arguments above tell the tale: term limits for representatives have led to *more* corruption, not to less! It's as if they know they only have eight years to milk every dollar from the special interests, so they've got to go full tilt! I may be a yellow-dog Democrat, but, in political science terms, I prefer a "republic" to a "democracy," i.e., I like to have a level of buffering (okay, I originally typed "buggering") between the representatives and the People. I think that direct democracy is a very scary form of government. If we *must* have term limits, can we also have longer terms, so that the representatives can be shielded from the need to be constantly campaigning? |
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#9
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I once thought that term limits but they're not.
It makes parties more powerful and makes representatives more beholden to their party. I would rather see proportional representation in congress and state legislatures. |
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#10
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For ages my Rep was Henry Hyde. Disagreed with much (all) of what he said, but he brought home the pork.
Most of which he ate. |
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#11
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With term limits in California (and I can confirm that suranyi's opinion bears a one-to-one correspondence with objective reality), among other "unintended" consequences, the only people with the political savvy and experience to operate the levers of governance are lobbyists (and, to the degree that they are passed down from outgoing to incoming officeholders, legislative staffers).
The sharp-eyed observer will note that none of the above people are put into place by the electorate. |
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#12
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....SYNTAX ERROR....SYNTAX ERROR....SYNTAX ERROR
Abort, Retry, Reboot... |
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#13
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The California experience refutes the OP.
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If experience didn't matter and term limits were such a wonderful idea, they would have them in the private sector. |
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#14
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Term limits are an emotional reaction to a set of very real problems. But "throw the bums out" doesn't do anything when there is an endless supply of bums to replace them. Really no different than the "we need a business person to run this country like a business" or any of a dozen other bumper-sticker instincts people sign on to without good reason. As to the OP, I am sympathetic to the desire for significant structural change. I supported the earmark ban, even though it was a meager part of the budget and only shifted the budget decisions to the executive, but if there's some chance it shakes things up in a positive way, I'm interested. Term limits just don't work. Last edited by dorsk188; 01-24-2012 at 01:24 AM. |
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#15
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Florida has had the same experience with term limits.
Inexperienced pols, rabid polarization, shameless pandering to money, and a refusal to make "short term pain, long term gain" decisions. It also has the effect of marginalizing any rural areas of the state. North Florida has a relatively low population as opposed to South Florida, our counter-balance used to be that we had long-term pols that eventually gained some political power. Now, South Fl just does what they want and ignores the "few" North Florida votes. |
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#16
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Thanks all. I was actually not aware of term limits in FL and CA... but that does explain a lot. Consider my ignorance defeated for today at least.
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#17
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We've decided we hate politics so much that it's better to have paid lobbyists as the people who understand the legislative process.
Seriously, thanks to term limits, the lobbyists know what's in a law better than the lawmakers. And I'm making a non-partisan slam. When I worked for an advocacy group, our policy director had worked in the field for 30 years and knew the ins and out of our particular "special interest." Thanks to term limits, the only people in state government with as much knowledge were a few veteran "bureaucrats" whose jobs the legislators were constantly trying to eliminate. The speaker of our state legislature once denied she was in the pocket of conservative special interests by pointing out that she had BOTH conservative and liberal interest groups on her speed dial. Is this really how we want to run our government? |
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#18
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Certainly, if she followed up with, "And I always get the opinions of both before making a decision."
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#19
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I say, if we are to have term limits, they should not be lifetime limits. I.e., you serve a term in Congress, you sit out a term, you can run for the same seat again next cycle. You and a friend in your own party might even simply, publicly agree to alternate in the office so long as your party holds the district. (In the interim, you might fill your time by holding some local office, or private-sector work.) That way the incumbency advantage is broken, which is the whole point of term limits; but, instead of a bunch of amateur "citizen legislators," we always have a large pool of experienced legislative talent in office and out of office.
Last edited by BrainGlutton; 01-25-2012 at 11:05 AM. |
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#20
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#21
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I think the root cause for term limits is the view of many people that being a legislator is not having a real job. All they see is the bloviating and the voting, they don't see committee meetings and research and support for constituents. It is why some people have a fit when high level government officials - who command staff and budgets rivaling large corporations - get paid salaries of middle managers in industry. Term limit for Steve Jobs? Terrible idea? For a senator? Great idea. Feh. |
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#22
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In Ohio, with term limits the longest serving politicians simply move to new positions. Termed out as a state rep? Run next as a state senator! When that is done, try for a state wide job, or one of the many elected court positions or county commissioner. In other words not so much new blood as any expected.
Where new people have moved in to the system, they have been highly polarized. The state has been gerrymandered to within an inch of its life. There is no need to ever move to the middle, most office seekers need only win the Republican primary. Nothing new, but now they have no incentive to work with the few Democrats, moderate Republicans, or anybody who disagrees with them. If you are only going to be in that position for couple of terms, why do you need to stockpile favors from anybody? Plus, once term limits are in place, no matter how badly things go, nobody is going to realistically support removing them. |
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#23
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There will always be an incumbent advantage as they are known quantities. If the voters like what they have, they can keep it. Other advantages (fundraising, connections, etc.) should be tackled through targeted legislation, I think. For a start, public funding of elections would do wonders. |
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#24
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My current state representative has been in the General Assembly for 17 uninterrupted years. He's switched houses now twice, since term limits expire after only four years. He's already planning to run for his old Senate seat in 2014, 20 years after he was first elected to the House.
Last edited by Lord Feldon; 01-25-2012 at 11:30 PM. |
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#25
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We've been spoiled. The Constitution set term limits. Two years for a Representative, six years for a Senator, four years for a President. They chose those limits because throughout history the limit for a term was always a lifetime. The Republicans fucked us by limiting the number of terms for a President at two and a half. This automatically makes a President a lame duck in his last term.
If any term limits provided in the Constitution are to be changed, the first change should be limiting the term of a Supreme Court Justice to less than a lifetime, and repealing the 22nd amendment. |
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#26
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#27
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I'm for time limits, whereby no one workd for the federal government for more than say 13 years. This would apply to anyone from the janitor at the Washington Monument to politicians. This would not only get rid of self serving politicians but to double and triple dippers.
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#28
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Just the first problem with this idea that popped into my head. |
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#29
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Welcome to the SDMB, Cpat!
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#30
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No military commander with more than 12 years experience.
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#31
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Replace them with experienced personnel with 10-15 years experience in the private sector. That's how we got to the moon in 8 years. |
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#32
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How about you quit your current job and do government service for only 12-13 years and then try to go back to the private sector? |
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#33
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Besides which, some government jobs don't really have private-sector equivalents. The vast majority of researchers in this country get paid primarily by some branch or another of the federal government.
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#34
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#35
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I may have a new rep with fresh ideas but he won't get anything done, and my district will lose whatever advantages we had under Old Codger. |
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#36
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Yea, I don't know of many private sector Generals.
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#38
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Term limits are advocated by people who want to put limits on other voters, and are willing to limit themselves in order to do so.
If you want to "vote the bums out", than vote that way, but don't try to limit other people, particularly people in other districts, who may like their current representative. |
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#39
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Hey, it would be a great job if you were 53. Other than that, not so much.
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#40
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This is exactly it. As I said before, the Constitution had term limits when it was written. Republicans amended the Constitution to take away people's rights to re-elect Democrats to the presidency. Now they want to take away your right to elect Democrats to other positions. If Americans weren't such a lazy ignorant lot, they would realize how lucky they are to have their legislatures and executive under term limits already. And they might wise up and realize that the modern 'pro-limit' effort doesn't address the problem originally in the Constitution, no term limit for judges.
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#41
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Do you think NASA scientists were told in 1961 that they would get fired in 1969? I suspect most of them thought the space program would continue far beyond. Not to mention that most people working on the moon program were working for private companies. Lots of them got fired when the project concluded, but that was always the way of the defense industry.
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#42
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#43
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#44
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#45
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Tis not I who was playing the word games. I'm trying to a stop to them.
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#46
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Yeah, I hadn't thought of this. Term limits for office holders can only begin to work if they are balanced with term limits for lobbyists and managers and representatives of large corporations.
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#47
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#48
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#49
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Never-the-less, I'll modify my rhetoric to include that fact. |
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#50
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misposted
Last edited by Acsenray; 01-31-2012 at 02:18 PM. |
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