So Long, Farewell
So long,
farewell, au revoir, auf wiedersehen
I´d like to stay and taste my first champagne
So long, farewell, auf Wiedersehen, goodbye
I leave and heave a sigh and say goodbye
Goodbye!
I´m glad to go, I cannot tell a lie
I flit, I float, I fleetly flee, I fly
The sun has gone to bed and so must I
Justice Thomas,
you have already tasted Harlan Crow’s champagne!
Knowing when to say goodbye is important. Too important to leave to an individual to choose when to say goodbye. Any appointment
as a constitutional officer, to serve as a representative of its sovereign, the
people, should have a limit. Legislative officers serve a term of two years in
the House and six years in the Senate. The chief executive, the President, serves
a term of four years. The officers of his executive branch, serve at his pleasure,
so they de facto serve terms of four years, and given that the president is limited
to two terms, practically no more than eight years. It is only judicial officers
who appear to serve for life. As constitutional officers they represent all of
the people, including wards of the people, children. Children eventually become
adults and are no longer wards. The federal voting age is 18 years (from the date
of birth), so arguably the term limit for any constitutional officer,
including members of the judiciary, should be no more than 18 years or else the wards have no say in their selection.
So why did the adopters of the Constitution not include a term
limit? Members of the judiciary are traditionally not appointed until they are
in their 30s. Life expectancy in the United States at the time the Constitution
was ratified was only 36 years. It thus seemed unnecessary to impose a term limit
of 18 years when Nature would get there first. But in 2022, life
expectancy at birth in the U.S. was 77.5 years. 18 years seemed like a life appointment
in 1789, but 18 years is a reasonable regency to what should never have been a lifetime
appointment.
This is not to say that an individual could not be reappointed after completing their
first 18-year term. While it is unlikely that a single individual would complete
all of that second term, serve for a total
of 36 years, a limit of two terms should be imposed, in case life expectancy makes
another unanticipated uptick. Chief Executive officers are already limited to two
terms of 4 years. It seems prudent that legislative officers should also be limited
to 36 years. That means that Representatives of the House would be limited to
18 terms, Senators would be limited to 6 terms. and judicial officers would be limited to 2 terms. By then, it should be clear
that the party’s over.