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by vlovich123
1220 days ago
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Sure. But if you have a large enough body and cap terms at 12 years or so, then the concern about experience is negated because there will always be enough experience in the body. The one paper everyone referenced is interesting but that study badly needs replication and verification before at just blindly assume there’s a there there. It was one state legislature which works quite differently from the federal government which typically has rules making agencies and other supports. After all, presidents get 4-8 years. Does this mean they’re so unable to do the job they outsource to contractors and lobbyists? To some extent maybe, but they also have staff and other sport resources. It’s certainly possible to design term limits that avoid various pitfalls. |
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This is a circular argument. The concern about infinite term career politicians is non-accountability and entrenched institutional corruption. Saying "well the institution has its own inertia and will still function" doesn't solve the original problem.
> After all, presidents get 4-8 years. Does this mean they’re so unable to do the job they outsource
I mean... yes? Presidents have a huge sprawling infrastructure that supports them. If there's anything the back-to-back presidencies of Trump and biden has taught us, it's that the organization surrounding the office of President largely run things anyway (Trump because he was dangerously unhinged and biden because he's grossly mentally deficient).
In fact, if it wasn't for the wildly unconstitutional expansion of power in executive orders in the past two decades, Presidents would have even less impact than they do already.
> It’s certainly possible to design term limits that avoid various pitfalls.
I think term limits are an attempt to treat a symptoms, rather than a problem. Career politicians are dangerous because of legal outside influence. I think campaign finance is the right place to strike. Money, via ads and other means, shouldn't be able to influence elections.