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Term Limit Traitors
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Before they got control of
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Congress, conservatives contended that the big problem in Washington was an
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infestation of vermin known as "career politicians." The newcomers came armed
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with a powerful repellent. Setting maximum terms of between six and 12 years in
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office would function as an antidote to Potomac fever and restore the place of
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the "citizen legislator," whose loyalty would remain with the voters who
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elected him, not the institution in which he served.
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This
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movement caught fire in 1994. By the end of that year, 22 states had passed
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term limitations on their own congressional delegations. But because it wasn't
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yet clear whether these limits were constitutional--the Supreme Court decided
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in 1995 that they weren't--the Contract With America also endorsed a term
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limits amendment to the Constitution. And since a constitutional amendment
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might not pass, many congressional candidates in 1994 and since have term
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limited themselves voluntarily. That is, they've promised to call it quits
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after six to 12 years in the House and 12 years in the Senate. One gung-ho
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freshman elected in '94 even gave the clerk of the House a letter of
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resignation dated January 2001 to demonstrate the sincerity of his promise.
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Forced retirement was a distant prospect then. But now the
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most enthusiastic term limiters in the House are facing the expectation that
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they will follow through on their pledge. For those who vowed to return to
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their plows after six years, the next term will be their last. Several of those
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freshmen actually appear to take the idea that they made a promise seriously
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and have reaffirmed their intentions of stepping down. But others are
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discovering nuances to the issue they never noticed before. In other words,
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they have turned into term limit traitors.
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The Benedict Arnold of the
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term limits movement is George Nethercutt of Washington state. Nethercutt
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defeated the last Democratic speaker of the House, Tom Foley, in 1994 on a
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platform that consisted of little more than term limits for members of
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Congress. He rode to office by allying himself with a state term limit
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initiative that Foley filed suit to overturn. Nethercutt recently changed his
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mind. "Make no mistake, I remain committed to term limits, but experience has
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taught me that six years may be too short," he said in a statement issued in
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February. In a follow-up interview, Nethercutt said that if the voters in
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Washington's Fifth District clamored for him to stay, he would consider it.
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Of course,
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the chief objection to term limits has always been that the people should have
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the right to elect whoever they want to represent them in Congress, including
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someone they have elected repeatedly before. Nethercutt now sees the merit of
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this argument, but he's far from admitting he was wrong. He says he's still for
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term limits--he just had the details wrong. Twelve years would be a more
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appropriate limit for the House--with nothing precluding another 12 in the
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Senate. And if Washington voters decide they still want Nethercutt after 24
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years? We can cross that bridge when we come to it.
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Nethercutt's fellow turncoat is John Shadegg of
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Arizona, one of the young hotheads in the freshman class of '94. In his first
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congressional campaign, Shadegg promised he would abide by the six-year limit
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set by Arizona voters. That limit, however, was declared unconstitutional, and
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Shadegg now feels the tug of his broader responsibilities. "The people who are
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honoring the six-year term limit are the ones with the most revolutionary zeal,
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and they're the ones that are leaving," he recently told the Arizona
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Republic , explaining his defection. In other words, Shadegg thinks people
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like himself who support term limits must go back on their word to prevent
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people who are really against term limits from getting elected.
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Another
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slow learner is Scott McInnis of Colorado, who was elected in 1992. McInnis has
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announced he will not step aside in 2000 as he had originally promised. His
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reason is that before he was elected to the House, he didn't understand how
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important the seniority system was in Congress. If Colorado's representatives
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were to heed term limits, the state's congressional delegation would be less
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powerful than the delegations from states that don't recognize term limits. The
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upshot, he says, would be unilateral disarmament for his state.
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The problem with these arguments is not that they are bad
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arguments. In fact, they're quite sensible. The seniority system means you get
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power by serving long enough to gain seniority. And a state that voluntarily
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limits the terms of its representatives harms itself relative to others. But
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there is no excuse for McInnis' just coming to grips with these objections.
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After 10 years in the Colorado House of Representatives, the last two as
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majority leader, he's no stranger to the concept of seniority. As to the
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unilateral disarmament point: It's a very solid objection. But it was an even
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better objection when McInnis supported the passage of Colorado's term limits
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law in 1994. Had the Supreme Court upheld the Colorado law, a binding term
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limit on all the state's legislators would have put it at a far greater
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disadvantage than a disposable promise by a few of its legislators. In fact,
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McInnis and his colleagues knew perfectly well what they were committing to
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when they swore they'd limit their own terms. But back when they made those
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promises, before they'd ever been elected to Congress, the prospect of leaving
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in six or eight or a dozen years didn't sound so bad.
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The hypocrisy here does not
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belong just to the few who made specific pledges. Term limits was the official
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position of the Republican Party in 1994. The Contract With America called for
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term limits for the entire House and Senate. (Of course, if you read the fine
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print, it only promised to bring such a proposal up for a vote.) More senior
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Republicans have been as disingenuous as the young bloods. They've just been
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more adept at avoiding personal embarrassment. Take Bill McCollum, a Florida
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representative who is one of the leaders on the issue in the House. He's in his
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18 th year of service and is running for re-election. No one back
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home is giving him a hard time on the issue, because he was not so foolish as
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to make a personal promise to step down.
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The term limits craze makes a
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nice case study in political demagoguery. All the problems the Republican
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radicals are belatedly recognizing now were totally obvious at the outset.
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Before long, we can expect to hear retirement-averse conservatives making the
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rest of the fine arguments against term limits. Experience, they will discover,
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is actually valuable. The fact that voters can and do reject incumbents will
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strike them as an epiphany. Republican term limit traitors don't need to
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apologize for changing their minds, which they have every right to do. What
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they owe us is an admission that their professed faith in term limits was phony
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in the first place.
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