Term limits
Re: Term limits
we don't need term limits, or age limits.
We need less corruption and less political money and smarter voters.
We need less corruption and less political money and smarter voters.
Just Ledoux it
Re: Term limits
bump
Shirley wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 7:38 pmWould you mind showing us your evidence that McConnell and Biden are "corrupt"?randylahey wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 6:56 pm And lets look around at your long term politicians.... people like biden, mitch mcconell, etc
You don't get more competitent representation. You get corrupt representation. The type that acts on behalf of big government's best interest, not the people. More time for corruption to take root
tia
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
Re: Term limits
Re: Term limits
That's such naive BS. Sorry, but it is. The only "power" the people have is in who they vote for. If you don't want corrupt politicians to keep getting re-elected then stop fucking voting for them.randylahey wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 6:53 pm When when you are appointed to act on behalf of the people... you really don't need experience here. Incompetent people shouldn't be getting elected into these positions
The point of term limits is to limit individual power. And so the power will continue to reside with the people
Re: Term limits
I have read a fair amount on this subject. I tend to think that the ultimate effect of term limits is strengthening the unaccountable lobbyist class.
Re: Term limits
^^^
They already have too much involvement and influence when it come to crafting legislation, imagine how much that would increase if a constantly changing cast of amateurs making up 50%* of the body showed up every other election not knowing how things get done.
*assuming a limit of 2 terms
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
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Re: Term limits
look no further than bobo and mtg
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
Re: Term limits
I had a friend who was a former State Representative. I told him I thought term limits were a good idea. He told me that what I didn't realize is that it wasn't until his second term that he even understood how things worked, how he could make things better. He was not in favor of term limits. He said career bureaucrats would run everything if there were term limits on elected office. He was a damn wise man, so I trust his judgement on that.
Nero is an angler in the lake of darkness
Re: Term limits
Why Term Limits SuckShirley wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 10:00 am^^^
They already have too much involvement and influence when it come to crafting legislation, imagine how much that would increase if a constantly changing cast of amateurs making up 50%* of the body showed up every other election not knowing how things get done.
*assuming a limit of 2 terms
https://craigcalcaterra.com/blog/why-term-limits-suck/
Yesterday I said, in passing, that I oppose legislative term limits. A lot of people both in the comments and on social media asked me why. What follows is my explanation.
First off, know that, while there is an element of principle here — I think that any law that curtails the right of people to choose their own representatives should be viewed extremely skeptically — this is not some mere philosophical opposition.
My opposition to term limits is based on living in a state which has had them for both its house and its senate for decades. Ohio’s term limit law was passed in 1992 and took effect in January 1993. Since then I have studied them as a political science major at Ohio State, worked with people subject to them as a private practice lawyer who had many political clients and matters, and worked directly with the legislature as its designated senior counsel in the Ohio Attorney General’s Constitutional Offices section. I, of course, have also lived under them as a citizen for all but three of the 30+ years they have been in effect. I offer all of that to tell you that, when it comes to term limits, I am not just offering my gut reaction here. I know of what I speak.
The fantasy that people who are only acquainted with the idea of term limits as opposed to having experience with the reality, is that term limits will kick out entrenched, corrupt public officials, inject the polity with fresh talent with new ideas who, by virtue of their outsider status, are not susceptible to corruption and by virtue of being limited will not be in perpetual campaign mode, thereby putting an end to the unholy alliance between elected officials and The Swamp. But it’s just that: fantasy. Indeed, rather than stem those things term limits have exacerbated them all.
The first thing term limit fans need to disabuse themselves of is the notion that term limits will create some sort of citizen legislator who serves for a brief period and then returns home having made a difference. That . . . is not a thing. Those who have become legislators in Ohio over the past 30 years have been every bit if not more careerist than those from non-term limited times. They just, by necessity, pursue it differently. As soon as they are elected to the house they start planning their strategy to get elected to the senate or vice-versa. If they make the jump they immediately start positioning themselves for a congressional seat, a statewide office, an executive appointment of some kind, or a place in the world of lobbying. If anything, our legislators now spend more time thinking about their careers than ever before and the palace intrigue is constant.
When you’re constantly on the make for your next gig, and when you cannot simply maintain your career by cultivating popularity back in your district via good acts — senate districts are different than house districts which are different than congressional districts, etc. etc. — the money men have all the power. At best that means caring about donors more than anyone else, but it can be worse.
A big reason my erstwhile client Larry Householder rose to power not just once but twice was that he understood this. He made himself a campaign donation clearinghouse, steering money to other legislators who were desperate for it in exchange for their loyalty. His ability to bundle a bunch of desperate, inexperienced legislators together gave him the ability to go shake down corporations which is why he’s now likely to die in prison. Not that his case can be cited as an example of swift justice being done. He was doing this for decades before he got caught, and the only reason he got caught leads us to another problem with term limits.
Householder got caught because the feds tapped the phone lines of a powerful lobbyist named Neil Clark, who bragged openly about his and Householder’s schemes. Clark was once your garden variety powerbroker, but he became insanely influential after term limits came online. All those new, inexperienced legislators coming in were easy pickings for an experienced and savvy operator like Clark and like others of his ilk. Both I and a lot of other people familiar with Clark’s rise observed his growing power — and his growing ego and ultimately his hubris — which led to his and Householder’s downfall. Clark, by the way, put a bullet in his own head while he was under co-indictment with Householder, but I suppose that’s neither here nor there.
The point here is that when you have term limits, you have inexperienced — and, based on my time counseling them when I was with the AG’s office, downright stupid — legislators. When you have inexperienced and stupid legislators they are easy prey for a lobbyist class that has been around the capitol for decades and knows how everything works. Well, “prey” may not be the best word here because the legislators are not victims. They LOVE that the lobbyists, to whom they happily outsource the writing of laws, are there to help them handle the boring business of governing while they attend to the more important matter of finding their next job. Indeed, we have had multiple instances in which it was discovered that bills went right from a lobbyist’s Microsoft Word file to a legislator’s email to the governor’s desk and right into the Ohio Revised Code. This idea that term limits actually empower lobbyists — and bureaucrats* and outside interest groups — as opposed to cutting them off at the knees like so many term limit advocates fantasize, is not just my observation. It’s been studied academically and the lobbyists have happily told researchers that this is exactly what happens.
A related argument I’ve heard — that term limits will slow the revolving door between government and lobbyists’ offices — is patently absurd. With so many legislators getting kicked out onto the street due to term limits, where in the hell do you think they’re going? If your answer is “back home to run their farm or their insurance agency or whatever” you’re such a sweet summer child that I just want to hug you and keep you safe from this cruel world. No, they are running to the ever-growing lobbying firms and professional associations and consultancies and boards of directors of businesses that make their money by virtue of exercising influence over government. And, of course, the friendlier legislators are to such firms while in office, the more likely they are to get those high-paying gigs when they leave office.
Finally, there’s the simple matter of competence. We may not want to acknowledge it, but legislating is a profession. It takes expertise and, like anything else, it’s better done by those with experience. Term limits, by definition, kick out the most experienced and thus effective legislators and replace them with a bunch of ambitious simpletons who got into the business of legislating because it seemed like a good career move, who have no real idea what they’re doing and, for all the reasons set forth above, don’t particularly care. While an analogy to being operated on by an inexperienced surgeon is probably a bit extreme here, we in term limited states are certainly requiring, metaphorically speaking, that our cars be fixed by inexperienced mechanics and our drinks be mixed by inexperienced bartenders. It’s nothing you’d ever do in any other situation but when it comes to legislating there are people out there who think it’s a great idea for ignoramuses who won’t be around long enough to become knowledgable and experienced to hold the gig.
So yeah, we’ve had a lot of very bad things happen in Ohio since term limits came online, some of which are the direct product of term limits some indirect. And hey, maybe some of them happen with or without term limits. But here’s the thing: absolutely none of the promised benefits of term limits have come to pass. At all. Like, literally none. Even if you believe the claims of the most staunch term limit advocates and read their lists of the great things that would happen if term limits were to be enacted where they don’t currently exist, you cannot find a single one of them that has actually happened in places where they do exist.
Every time I mention my opposition to term limits a lot of people ask me why I oppose them. I think, after 30 years of this failure, the onus should be on them to explain why we should keep them.
*It’s worth noting that the other big political corruption case with which I had first-hand experience, Coingate, was kicked into motion when financial lobbyists and emboldened and crooked bureaucrats convinced the term-limit-weakened Ohio legislature to pass a law that struck the requirement that state funds be invested solely in bonds. After that passed, the same fund managers and brokers who funded that lobbying effort got the crooked bureaucrats to hire them to invest state pension funds and worker’s comp funds in questionable and sometimes downright shady investments. Things like rare coins, which one of my clients — and now, after his lengthy prison sentence, a loyal Cup of Coffee subscriber — managed on behalf of the state. That whole deal was not a DIRECT result of term limits, of course, but it was the sort of thing that could not have happened if not for a legislature that was uninterested and/or ignorant about the matter and lobbyists who were emboldened by their new power.
Re: Term limits
You make it seem like we would be vulnerable to an outsider who might very well not have the best interest of the country at heart. Maybe even refuse to allow elections to replace him. Maybe even overtly grift instead of doing the tough business of governing. It seems so far-fetched. Yet.
Re: Term limits
Good read, fish.Sparko wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 10:54 amYou make it seem like we would be vulnerable to an outsider who might very well not have the best interest of the country at heart. Maybe even refuse to allow elections to replace him. Maybe even overtly grift instead of doing the tough business of governing. It seems so far-fetched. Yet.
“The Electoral College is DEI for rural white folks.”
Derek Cressman
Derek Cressman
Re: Term limits
A Mango-nian candidate.
Re: Term limits
i could absolutely get behind an age limit. and term limit. for sure.
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Re: Term limits
This is going to be fun.
“By way of contrast, I'm not the one who feels the need to respond to every post someone else makes”
Psych- Every Single Time
Psych- Every Single Time
Re: Term limits
He might have everyone on ignore. I read that it was ego soothing.
Re: Term limits
That's how I feel. Congresspersons have to ingest information on a vast array of topics. It takes years to gain enough experience to learn how to maneuver through all of that. Having a steady stream of ignorant (to the process) newbies just means that you will inevitably see a rise in outsiders taking advantage of their lack of experience. If you think the influence of outside money is bad now, just wait until they have less knowledgeable gatekeepers keeping an eye on them.japhy wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 10:08 am I had a friend who was a former State Representative. I told him I thought term limits were a good idea. He told me that what I didn't realize is that it wasn't until his second term that he even understood how things worked, how he could make things better. He was not in favor of term limits. He said career bureaucrats would run everything if there were term limits on elected office. He was a damn wise man, so I trust his judgement on that.
Re: Term limits
He tends to avoid responding to substantive points with anything other than whataboutisms and blanket dismissals so I doubt it will be "good" at all.
He wants to restore the "power to the people" but the people repeatedly prove that they are ill equipped to handle it. The people are the ones who are too lazy to research new candidates and who keep putting the politicians who they have a problem with back into office.
The people who want "smaller government" are looking for the government to fix the problem by passing term limits because they don't feel like putting in the effort to fix it themselves. They mostly just want to bitch and complain without using their brains.
Re: Term limits
How are the people arguing for pure meritocracy also supporting term limits and age limits?
Re: Term limits
I think you are misunderstanding pure libertarianism. Which, as we all know, means "no rules for me, but people who want what I want make rules covering people who don't want what I want, and those other people have to follow the rules."