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Sadly the Secret Service has had some scandals this century. Many SS agents are [Sleezebag] supporters. I doubt that the ones who don't support him wish to risk their lives for him.
The dangers of legislative term limits are many, however. First, they constrain choice, which is inherently anti-democratic.
Second, they are likely to make elected officials more dependent upon lobbyists and consultants to build relationships with other legislators, and to develop both issue and procedural knowledge.
legislators will gum the works of government by preening for the next sinecure,
WHAAAA? Do you live somewhere where a legislative seat is flipping between Democrat and Republican (and nothing else) frequently? My driver's license address has this old Republican windbag, Virginia Foxx, who's been there since 2005. Her incumbency is clearly constraining my choice. She's unassailable. She'll have to retire or die. I don't even know if that should be the case with SCOTUS justices. I definitely have no taste for it in legislators.
I don't even know what this means or could possibly mean. Every elected official is already deeply in the sack with lobbyists and consultants already. I can't even imagine a theory, of there being more of it, or how you would justify a comparison against some kind of control group. In other words, I pronounce this concern to be Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.
Again, "as if" that's not done already.
They're problematic when you decide the incumbent is good at their job and want them to keep delivering.
But beyond that, there is a bigger issue: democratic accountability is forward-looking. If, once elected, I know that there is no reward of reelection waiting for me after the end of my term, you lose the biggest lever you have to influence me in the direction you'd prefer I go. More on this below.
It means that being a legislator is like any other career path: experience matters.
the less time they have to become an expert on any issue,
much less to master parliamentary procedure.
Right now, the influence of lobbyists and consultants is offset by a legislator's fear of future accountability to voters. Most legislators can't simply go "all in" on their own brand of crazy without risking alienation of crucial supporters.
I'm not interested in legislators as permanent ongoing institutions with an entourage. Especially because in the USA, it will be a Democrat or a Republican so ensconced. I am a Socialist. Exactly what kind, I cannot quite tell you, although not the Marxist-Leninist Bolshevik tank driving kind. There are a number of kinds of Socialists, historically over the years, that were / are not that. The point is that a system that promotes nearly lifelong incumbency, is decidedly against my political interest. And even if Socialism became competitive in the American political landscape again, I wouldn't change my tune. Who needs a legislator that routinely stacks up their incumbent advantages? Doesn't keep them on their toes.
Loss of control within a political party, that some young upstart will succeed you, and do a much better job at it, is a motive to perform. Your concern is really only highest when a politician intends to retire.
I will take the inexperience of Alexandria Occasio-Cortez over any such claim, any day. Until the day that I have piles of Socialists to choose to put into office, and am spoiled for choice. In the interim, I will take the ones that actually want to fight, and haven't had as much time to become fat and corrupted.
Legislators have an extensive staff for a reason. Some legislators are so old, iit is clearly only their staff that is doing the actual work. The old fart who's about to die of a brain disease, is just a figurehead for the staff bureaucracy, which promotes a certain political value.
Frankly, who cares. I know idiots get elected, but if you can't figure that stuff out in a few months, there's something basically wrong with your brain.
You sound like a Centrist. I'm not surprised that a Centrist would want to preserve the structural status quo.