Should the constitutional limit preventing US Presidents from serving more than two terms be repealed?
All the Yes points:
- The two-term limit is undemocratic. If Americans want to vote for a President again after two terms…
- A strong executive is important for both philosophical and practical reasons. Philosophically, a st…
- In times of national or international crisis, continuity and experience can be vital. Electorates c…
- Some policies require long term leadership to ensure their success, over a long period of time: for …
- If the two term rule is aimed at preventing an entrenched set or clique, then why permit Vice Presid…
All the No points:
The two-term limit is undemocratic. If Americans want to vote for a President again after two terms…
Yes because…
The two-term limit is undemocratic. If Americans want to vote for a President again after two terms, and that President is willing to serve, why should their wishes automatically be denied? The two-term convention was seized upon by a coalition of senators who wanted more power for themselves (by undermining the Presidency), FDR haters and presidential aspirants who wanted to ensure regular turnover at the top. There is no logical basis for this limitation beyond that. The effect of this scheming is damaging: it denies Americans the chance to vote for a candidate they might want to support. This amendment limits voter choice.
No because…
The Presidency is different from almost any other kind of office in the US. Senators and Congressmen don’t have term limits because their voices are balanced by opposition in their respective chambers; the President has no comparable counterbalance. The nearest analogy would be with state governors – many of which have term limits, too. This is because the role of the individual in such ‘head of executive’ functions is of such importance that pure democracy – unlimited terms – must be tempered by the fear of ‘elective dictatorship’ – a strong President using the undoubted advantages of incumbency to win election after election. America’s beginnings are based in a rejection of monarchy and of cronyism: the 22nd Amendment stops this from coming about by other means.
A strong executive is important for both philosophical and practical reasons. Philosophically, a st…
Yes because…
A strong executive is important for both philosophical and practical reasons. Philosophically, a strong executive is desirable as a motor for change and an efficient response to changing times The 22nd Amendment imbalances government in the legislature’s favour. In practical terms, term limits weren’t accidentally omitted from the constitution – the Founding Fathers considered, debated and rejected them. This is because the prospect of future tenure gives the Presidency leverage to get things done. Without that, Presidential terms suffer the lame duck effect, in which a President is less and less able to force his legislative agenda: for example, after Eisenhower’s overwhelming win in 1956, Congressional Republicans increasingly ignored his leadership despite his fresh and powerful mandate. The limit effectively denies the choice voters have made of coming to practical fruition: the status quo undermines second term presidents.
No because…
Term limits didn’t have to be mentioned in the Constitution because from Washington onwards the convention of two term maximum Presidencies was respected; only when it was broken did a rule need to be put in place. The President’s strength is dependent upon many things – personal popularity, his relationship with his party, which party controls Congress, events abroad, etc: the potential of a third term is inferior to all of these as a tool for making others help the presidential program. In any case, the power of potential future office primarily draws its strength from potential patronage – a nepotistic consideration which, though inevitable, should not be credited with such importance that a third term should be allowed to encourage it.
In times of national or international crisis, continuity and experience can be vital. Electorates c…
Yes because…
In times of national or international crisis, continuity and experience can be vital. Electorates can recognise this – hence FDR’s third and fourth term wins during the Second World War. The 22nd Amendment automatically denies the possibility of democratically approved continuity. This is particularly worrying given that thousands of jobs in the executive branch of government change hands every time a new President is elected, something which is not so common in the civil service of other countries. The opposition must show why the idea of continuity in a crisis is less important than the principle of a two-term limit.
No because…
Since the end of the Second World War, the CIA and the White House administration have conducted bipartisan briefings for presidential candidates of both parties, irrespective of the incumbent’s allegiance, to ensure continuity. The actual presence of the same individual is far less important than the knowledge and understanding this scheme guarantees. The ‘have experience or not have experience’ challenge presented is a false dichotomy.
Some policies require long term leadership to ensure their success, over a long period of time: for …
Yes because…
Some policies require long term leadership to ensure their success, over a long period of time: for example, FDR’s post-depression social reforms, ‘The New Deal.’ If those policies are ones voters support, why deny them the chance of continuous development?
No because…
If these are policies voters really support, then the party the President belongs to can continue them. If they are so weak that only the charisma of a particular President can see them through the legislative process, then perhaps it is right that they fall.
If the two term rule is aimed at preventing an entrenched set or clique, then why permit Vice Presid…
Yes because…
If the two term rule is aimed at preventing an entrenched set or clique, then why permit Vice Presidents and other close associates of a President run, as with the Reagan-Bush presidencies, where the new administration retained the majority of key personnel (including cabinet members)? In truth, all the problems the 22nd Amendment supposedly combats – a clique or group dominating politics – happen anyway. But these are people that have been voted for – as a successful third term president would be. It’s not as if suddenly the rules of government change in a third term: all the checks and balances in place for the first two remain. A third term president is no more innately powerful than a second.
No because…
Whilst checks and balances do indeed remain in place, the longer a specific individual is in place (and has the potential to continue to be in place in the future), the greater the chance that jobs and positions are farmed out to supporters of that man, that regional elections are fixed to ensure personal support for him nationally: the longer the tenure, the greater the chance for corruption. The whole point of the two term convention, which developed into the 22nd Amendment, was that no one man is greater than the office of President – that even Washington would not remain in power, despite the fact that people wanted him to.
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