Submitted by AlwaysGrateful710 t3_ypo8l4 in baltimore
The_Waxies_Dargle t1_ivl08gb wrote
DEMOCRATS ON TERM LIMITS:
Barack Obama: “We want to see new voices and new ideas emerge. I think that is why term limits are a really useful thing.”
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot: “Chicago is the largest city in the country without mayoral term limits,” she notes, which “has led to entrenched leaders, a lack of new ideas and creative thinking and city government that works for the few, not the many.”
U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke, TX: “The longer you are in office, the less connected you are to the people you represent, the less accountable, the less responsive. The people in this country understand that and get that and I think it helps to account for our historic low level of popularity.”
New York Governor, Kathy Hochul: “I want people to believe in their government again. With these bold reforms, we will ensure New Yorkers know their leaders work for them and are focused on serving the people of this state,” Gov. Hochul said.
U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper, Colorado: “I would not be in politics were it not for term limits. It makes sense at all levels of government.”
Andrew Yang, Candidate for NYC Mayor and former Presidential Candidate: “With term limits, members of Congress would get what they went to DC to accomplish done and then go home. It would make room for new leaders with new experiences and fresh ideas. It would make time in Congress about reaching a goal, not reaching retirement after a long career with a good salary at the expense of the public. And it would give legislators a period of time when they didn’t need to constantly fundraise, as their final term wouldn’t hold the option for reelection.”
State Rep. Geraldine Thompson, FL: “I support term limits for elected officials because I believe that too often politicians become entrenched, more concerned about their reelection than the business of the people. Our members of Congress spend too much time fundraising and not enough time governing because their number one concern is their reelection. Term limits ensure that rather than focusing on the next election, our members of Congress will be focused on what they c
Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell: “I believe we should change the charter and every elected official in Philadelphia — controller, district attorney, mayor, and City Council members — should be limited to two terms,” Rendell said. “We would have a more effective and efficient government if we did that.”
pk10534 t1_ivl8wj8 wrote
Thank you. I really don’t understand why suddenly everybody is acting like opposing unlimited stints in power is conservative, even if Sinclair supports it. I’m sure Sinclair is also against kicking puppies, that doesn’t mean we can’t agree on some basic issues.
sllewgh t1_ivlaeea wrote
It's irrelevant if it's conservative, what's important is that it's anti democratic. Voters should decide when someone's term is up, not term limits. This just makes it easier to buy politicians, especially when they get the chance to buy them all at once in 8 years.
pk10534 t1_ivlbuv7 wrote
Yeah you say that, but I guarantee if trump had said “term limits are anti-democratic, I’m gonna change the law so I can run for a third term” you wouldn’t be singing the same tune. It’s preposterous to state that limiting politicians from holding positions of power indefinitely is “anti-democratic”
sllewgh t1_ivld8lz wrote
There would be a big difference between a president unconstitutionally granting themselves power and voters democratically changing the laws that govern them, so... Shit example. Also, having precedent doesn't make it any less undemocratic.
pk10534 t1_ivle2ff wrote
So modify it. If trump voters were able to amend the constitution to give trump unlimited terms, you wouldn’t mind that at all and you see nothing wrong with that.
sllewgh t1_ivlfw0j wrote
You've badly misjudged my politics. No, I will not suddenly have a problem with it just because Trump's name is attached to it, especially given the massive effort, overwhelming popular support and organization that would require.
Do you have an argument in favor of your own beliefs or do you just want to ask about mine? I think voters should decide when someone's term ends. Why do you think they should not have that choice?
pk10534 t1_ivli0c1 wrote
If the voters pass an amendment establishing term limits, you can’t possibly argue the voters aren’t getting a choice in determining the longevity of a politicians’ career. That is the voters making a choice. It’s obviously able to be changed if the voters decide they don’t want term limits.
sllewgh t1_ivllgml wrote
Sure, you can pass undemocratic policy democratically. That's not what I'm asking. I'm asking about the merits of the policy. Why should this choice be taken from voters?
pk10534 t1_ivlm486 wrote
The choice is not being taken from voters; they are absolutely able to amend or change any part of the state constitution either through referendum like this proposition or through their candidates to the state legislature. And by that logic, any law or bill passed removes a choice for voters. If voters truly feel the policy needs to be changed, they can enact that change again. You’re treating this like it’s not able to be changed once it gets voted on and that just isn’t true
sllewgh t1_ivlmxry wrote
You're dodging the question. If this passes, voters will not be able to reelect someone they might want to continue to represent them. We will be taking away that choice. Why is that good or necessary?
pk10534 t1_ivlppux wrote
I’ve answered the question several times already, I don’t know how many more you’d like me to repeat it: I don’t think it’s beneficial for democracy or society for a politician to hold indefinite power. To expand upon that:
I think it creates political machines and hinders the ability for fresh legislative ideas or meritocracy in legislatures/political bodies because seniority is given preference, no matter how good of a lawmaker one actually is. Incumbencies of a long duration can also create unfair advantages because the name recognition and familiarity can set up steep burdens for new candidates.
By your logic, a monopoly is okay and good because consumers chose it and we shouldn’t remove that “choice” from consumers. But that’s not always true. Sometimes we do need to ensure one entity (person or company) does not obtain too much power or presence over society or a legislature or a field of enterprise.
To further poke holes in your logic, why have age limits or residency requirements or ANY requirements for politicians since it removes people’s “choice”? I don’t buy the argument at all that setting basic standards and ethics for politicians is robbing voters of their choice.
sllewgh t1_ivlrn4k wrote
>I think it creates political machines and hinders the ability for fresh legislative ideas or meritocracy in legislatures/political bodies because seniority is given preference, no matter how good of a lawmaker one actually is. Incumbencies of a long duration can also create unfair advantages because the name recognition and familiarity can set up steep burdens for new candidates.
Question K does not get us closer to a meritocracy, it takes us further away by indiscriminately removing politicians regardless of their competency. This policy does not serve your stated values, it proposes a paternalistic system that assumes voters can't make good choices on their own, yet relies on them doing so more often.
>By your logic, a monopoly is okay
Please stick to engaging with stuff I actually said instead of making up arguments for me.
>To further poke holes in your logic, why have age limits or residency requirements or ANY requirements for politicians since it removes people’s “choice”?
There are tangible downsides to having children or people who don't live here as representatives.
pk10534 t1_ivltel5 wrote
Lol that’s exactly what I thought. You admit there are valid reasons as to why certain requirements for the eligibility of politicians to run should be put into place, you just don’t agree with mine. And that’s okay, you don’t have to be for term limits. But you certainly cannot claim I’m removing a choice from the voter when you endorse policies would also, by what you have stated, remove a choice from a voter as long it’s for a “tangible reason”.
sllewgh t1_ivlttvg wrote
It's not the same thing at all. All children are unqualified for office. Not all incumbents need removal.
The_Waxies_Dargle t1_ivlmy3b wrote
> I think voters should decide when someone's term ends.
That's what this question is about. Voter deciding if they think term limits are good way to keep the democratic process vibrant and fresh instead of the same terrible candidates winning because they got elected once.
sllewgh t1_ivlo40w wrote
Hard disagree. This is limiting all candidates, not bad ones.
The_Waxies_Dargle t1_ivlmi9b wrote
> Voters should decide when someone's term is up, not term limits.
Unless they vote FOR term limits. Then the voters are deciding that the incumbent advantage is undemocratic and we shouldn't be beholden to ineffective politicians just because they got elected once.
sllewgh t1_ivlnya3 wrote
>Unless they vote FOR term limits. Then the voters are deciding that the incumbent advantage is undemocratic
You throw the baby out with the bath water by preventing people that are actually good from continuing to serve.
>and we shouldn't be beholden to ineffective politicians just because they got elected once.
Then vote the ineffective ones out instead of passing a policy that's indiscriminate.
AdDue1062 t1_ivo8ien wrote
Because they're mostly paid shills. The people have spoken and they are hugely in favor of term limits despite whatever disinformation is being spread.
pk10534 t1_ivp6pzl wrote
Exactly! Happy to see it passed :)
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