Thursday, June 19, 2014

Nothing Says “We Don’t Care” Like 24 Year Congressional Term Limits


With the midterm election in November and Congress sitting on a 13 percent approval rating, many Americans are eager to change the trend of re-electing incumbents who seem to have an artificial advantage. Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-S.C.) has suggested an amendment to the constitution that would limit Congressmen to 24 years of service (12 in the house and 12 in the Senate); a suggestion that is meant to pacify Americans and make sure that the status quo endures. This non-fix is just as unlikely to occur as a legitimate fix such as proportional representation.


Once again, a Republican is able to pass a counterintuitive, insincere, solution as a reasonable one. Whether it’s narrowing the gap between rich and poor with tax cuts for the rich, or reducing gun violence with more guns, they always seem to solve problems with policies that don’t quite make sense. Now they want to curb our frustration with the people who represent us, by making sure that we can only be frustrated with any individual for 24 years at a time. Some of us would have assumed that electing a good person in the first place, rather than limiting the bad person to a quarter century of service, would have been a better idea.
The artificial advantage afforded to incumbent Congressmen (incumbents also possess intrinsic advantages) has to do with Gerrymandering. Since Gerrymandering is such a funny word, one sounds like a crazy liberal when they use it, compared to a person who simply wants term limits. Gerrymandering is, of course, redistricting with sinister intentions. 


Whatever party runs the state legislature is in charge of figuring out where the districts will be (with a few exceptions). So, they draw them in such a way that maximizes the potential for their fellow party members to be elected, while many Americans are not represented adequately.
In 2012, for example, Democrats running for the House of Representatives received 1.4 million more votes than their Republican counterparts, yet the Republicans remained in control of the house. This is because the idea behind Gerrymandering is to draw a couple of throw away district lines that contain all of your opponents.  This wastes their votes, if they even bother to vote. There are folks on the left who think that a third party, comprised of retired judges and other civil servants, should draw the districts. Why does the left favor this idea while the right favors term limits instead? Could it be because the right is in control and they know that term limits will never happen?
 Even if they did amend the constitution, term limits will not solve anything, since many Congressional candidates run unopposed or against lackluster adversaries.
All things considered, it is difficult to blame Republicans for not wanting to fix gerrymandering on their watch. It is easy to say “Not fair” when the momentum is with your opponents. When you have the advantage, however, you are much less likely to complain. At any rate, this proposed, bipartisan, district purveying, group of civil servants is still prone to unintentional gerrymandering. By the way, neither term limits nor counter-gerrymandering measures will affect the Senate, which is designed to retain people for long periods of time.
                

The idea of term limits had to be a tongue in cheek way for Mick Mulvaney to let us know that he thinks that we are poor and stupid.  On the other hand, the idea of the bipartisan district deciders is a temporary workaround. The real “fix” seems to be proportional representation. If it is all that we can do to understand gerrymandering as a nation, a lot of things would have to happen before we have proportional representation.  We should still talk about it and behave as though we will accept nothing less.

                

On Mulvaney’s website, he makes himself out to be a boy scout who wants to put an end to gerrymandering. If you think that Congressmen are, in any way, interested in relinquishing power,  or that their wealthy constituents are interested in making less money, you are a far less cynical man than I am.

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