Looking to term limits to reduce corruption is focusing on a symptom more than
addressing the problem. The problem is lack of accountability. Due to the
corrupting influence of power, whether a public official serves in the same
office for one year or fifty years, corruption can be expected if a public
official is not held accountable. For example, if States don't hold US
Congressmen representing their State accountable we shouldn't be surprised if
those delegates act contrary to the interests and welfare of their States, if
the US Congress assumes powers not delegated to the US Congress by the US
Constitution, if massive amounts of money go toward departments, agencies, and
programs that are not constitutionally mandated, or if the US Congress fails to
impeach public officials that commit crimes or violate the US Constitution.
A term limit merely
limits how long we will trust a public official, and the first problem with
that is we should not trust public officials, we should be holding them
accountable.
The several States should be exercising the constitutional right of recall. Article 5
of the Articles of Confederation gave each State the right to recall and
replace its congressmen at any time. The right of recall is not denied in the
US Constitution, which means the Tenth Amendment protects the right of each
State to recall and replace its congressmen.
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