Average American
citizens have been calling for several years for term limits for Senators and
Representatives. I am one of them. I believe the time has come to investigate
the pros and cons of limiting the time people spend in the U.S. Congress.
When the Constitution was
written and ratified, there were no professional politicians. Men would go to
Washington, D.C. to serve their country for a few years, and then they went
home to their families and their professions. I feel certain that none of them
thought anyone would want to be a politician for life!
President George Washington declined
to serve a third term, stating that any two terms of four years should be
enough for any president. This became the unwritten rule for presidents until
1940 when Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to a third term and then a fourth
term in 1944. FDR died before completing his fourth term. He was the first and
only president to serve more than two terms.
In 1947 Congress passed a new
Amendment to the Constitution to limit presidential terms. The Twenty-Second
Amendment was passed by Congress on March 21, 1947, and ratified by the states
on February 27, 1951. It states: “No person shall
be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who
has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two
years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be
elected to the office of President more than once. But this Article shall not
apply to any person holding the office of President when this Article was
proposed by Congress, and shall not prevent any person who may be holding the
office of President, or acting as President, during the term within which this
Article becomes operative from holding the office of President or acting as
President during the remainder of such term.”
Fast forward
more than 60 years and we have professional Senators and Representatives who
serve in Congress for thirty or forty or even more years. They say and do the
things that they need to say and do in order to get re-elected. They are no
longer serving the people; they serve to gain more power. Somehow, those we
elect to Congress become millionaires. It seems that the longer they serve, the
more power they have and the more corruption sets in.
We the people of the United
States spoke loudly and clearly in the 2016 election when we elected Donald
Trump, an outsider, to be our next President. Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah) believes that we said that the federal
government needs to be fixed. He voiced his support for 12-year term limits for
both Senators and Representatives because he does not like the way politicians
dilute the right to vote because of the power they gain with experience. He
believes that we need a constitutional amendment to limit congressional term
limits to twelve years – two terms for Senators and three terms for
Representatives.
Senator Lee stated, “Congress is
the people’s branch” and needs to be “responsible and accountable.” He said
“The American people are frustrated with a government that knows no boundaries.
The American people … know that in many respects they are no longer in charge
of their own government. That the government that was created to serve them has
tried to untether itself from them, moving away from them and becoming a
task-master rather than a servant…. This is a problem because it results in all
kinds of lawmaking made by all kinds of government officials who are never
subject to elections and therefore have no reason to fear when the people get
concerned about new laws."
I hate the thought of losing strong
conservatives like Senator Lee from Congress, but I believe an amendment to the
Constitution to limit the terms of service in Congress is the only way we can “drain
the swamp” in Washington, D.C. Men and women like Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi,
Orin Hatch, Mitch McConnell apparently do not know when to call it quits. They
just keep running for office and getting elected because of the power they
have.
Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla) announced that they will introduce a constitutional amendment next month to
limit Senators to two terms in office and Representatives to three terms. Senator
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that an amendment limiting office terms
would not be on the Senate agenda. He obviously likes the power of his office
and does not want to be forced out of the Senate.
I believe that members of
Congress, such as McConnell, will have to act on an amendment, or they will be
forced to do so by a Constitutional Convention. American citizens are tired of
the way elected leaders have gone to Washington, D.C., and failed to make life
better for ordinary citizens. I believe that sooner or later we will see an
amendment to the Constitution to limit the terms of office for both Senators
and Representatives.
No comments:
Post a Comment