home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1674>
- <title>
- Dec. 05, 1994: Law:A Coming to Terms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 05, 1994 50 for the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 41
- A Coming to Terms
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Voters love to restrict incumbents, but the Supreme Court may
- squash the idea
- </p>
- <p>By Howard Chua-Eoan--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington, Wendy Cole/Chicago,
- Andrea Sachs/New York and Richard Woodbury/Denver
- </p>
- <p> Ed Jaksha of Omaha, Nebraska, is a true believer, but he looked
- like a true eccentric in early November as he roamed 600 miles
- across the plains of Nebraska, covering much of the distance
- on foot. The retired telephone-company manager, 79, wore a Revolutionary
- War-era costume, complete with brocade knickers, flounced tie
- and a white wig. His message was equally rambunctious. "We have
- a distant, oppressive government in Washington," he told people
- along the way. "It is time to restore a citizen legislature.
- If we didn't have liars and cheaters and people who wanted to
- be in office forever, we wouldn't be doing this."
- </p>
- <p> Jaksha's attitude, however, was anything but fringe. He was
- supporting the ballot proposition to limit the terms of congressional
- officeholders, a measure that rolled to victory Nov. 8 in Nebraska
- and six other states: Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts
- and Nevada. Only voters in Utah, which earlier had adopted limits,
- turned down a proposed addition to their restrictions. The past
- election brings to 22 the number of states that have imposed
- term limits on members of Congress since 1990. "It would be
- pointless to mount an opposition," said Ernie Chambers, a 24-year
- veteran in the Nebraska state senate. "It's like a house is
- burning down, and all you have to put it out with is a teaspoon
- of water." What could have a drenching effect on the term-limits
- movement, however, is the Supreme Court. Officeholders will
- keenly be following the oral arguments this week in the case
- of U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton and Bryant v. Hill, which will
- be the first tests of the constitutionality of such limits.
- The cases involve a constitutional amendment passed by Arkansas
- voters in 1992 that limits U.S. Representatives to three two-year
- terms and Senators to two six-year terms. The amendment in question
- states, "The people of Arkansas find and declare that elected
- officials who remain in office too long become preoccupied with
- re-election and ignore their duties as representatives of the
- people."
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration will join the League of Women Voters
- in arguing against the law even as the attorney general of the
- President's home state defends it. "If the Supreme Court upholds
- the constitutionality of term limits, it will change the political
- landscape," says Professor Ronald Rotunda of the University
- of Illinois College of Law. "It will be as important to voting
- as Brown v. Board of Education was to desegregation."
- </p>
- <p> The legal battleground covers two sections of the Constitution.
- Proponents of term limits will highlight Article I, Section
- 4, which they say gives each state the authority to prescribe
- the "time, place and manner" of congressional elections, therefore
- delegating to the local level the rules of who gets to run.
- Opponents will counter that such an interpretation of the Constitution
- is much too broad. They will also point out that the exclusive
- qualifications for members of the House of Representatives and
- the Senate are explicitly set forth in Article I, Sections 2
- and 3--members of Congress must be at least 25 years old and
- citizens of the U.S. for at least seven years; Senators must
- be at least 30 years old and citizens for at least nine years;
- both Senators and Representatives must be residents in the state.
- Plainly, they reiterate, there is no reference to term limits.
- </p>
- <p> The Arkansas law has been struck down by every lower tribunal,
- and the Supreme Court is likely to do the same. Says Professor
- Tracey Maclin of Boston University Law School: "The court realizes
- this is a pressing issue. If they duck this case, another one
- will come up soon. This is a good vehicle for stopping the whole
- movement in its tracks." Nevertheless, laws limiting the terms
- of state officials, which have generally been upheld by lower
- courts and are not at issue in next week's Supreme Court case,
- have changed the nature of political activity from the school
- board to the Governor's mansion. A case in point: California's
- term limits may require assembly speaker Willie Brown, who has
- won re-election every time since 1964, to run for a state senate
- seat the next time around if he wants to stay in the legislature.
- </p>
- <p> If term limits were to be successfully imposed on the federal
- level, some critics are worried that Congress may become too
- much of an amateur's game. The career support staff, along with
- lobbyists and bureaucrats, may run roughshod over green legislators.
- Furthermore, many states would lose the clout of established
- Representatives and Senators, the hoary politicos whose years
- of service guarantee them influence and chairmanships of committees.
- Says Pat Schroeder, the 10-term Representative from Colorado:
- "Four states have half the votes in Congress. A state with only
- six votes and no seniority isn't going to get far. Six votes
- won't stop a speeding train. I guess people just don't understand
- we're six out of 435. You've got to have power and seniority
- to get anywhere." Schroeder, an ardent opponent of term limits,
- won re-election three weeks ago even as her state voted to tighten
- its 1990 federal strictures and also extend limits to all locally
- elected officials.
- </p>
- <p> Opponents of term limits argue that Americans have always had
- the power to turn incumbents out of office--by voting. It's
- not that simple, says Cleta Deatherage Mitchell, the general
- counsel for the Term Limits Legal Institute and co-counsel in
- Bryant v. Hill. "Incumbents have such enormous advantages that
- it makes the whole notion of competitive elections a mockery,"
- she says. "It almost takes a national temper tantrum to dislodge
- incumbents." Meanwhile, Rotunda points to the existence of one
- federal-term limit--the two terms of the President. "The nation
- has survived, indeed flourished," he adds. Furthermore, there
- is another benefit to shorter terms. "When you have open seats,
- women and minorities have a better chance of getting elected."
- </p>
- <p> The term-limits sentiment, of course, was exploited for political
- gain during the election. Republicans espoused such initiatives
- to pry long-lived Democrats from power--outgoing House Speaker
- Tom Foley in Washington State being the most notable victim.
- But now that the G.O.P. is ensconced, the party is discovering
- that the movement is a class-action suit against every politician.
- A Supreme Court decision against the Arkansas law will, for
- the moment, calm the nerves and further the ambitions of officeholders.
- But that merely moves the battle to another site. "If we lose
- the Supreme Court case," says Mitchell, "it puts a tremendous
- amount of pressure on Congress to enact term limits." Support
- there is spotty--and certainly less than heartfelt. While
- Newt Gingrich's Contract with America features a term-limits
- constitutional amendment, a parallel agenda, which is set forth
- by senior Senate Republicans, does not mention the issue at
- all.
- </p>
- <p> Mere lip service by Congress won't assuage the national temper
- tantrum. "Serious problems--like health care and the deficit
- were rumbling for years," says Lawrence Dodd, a University of
- Colorado political scientist. "Now they've broken out in serious
- dramatic ways, and Congress isn't equipped to deal with them."
- More legislative inaction will merely heighten what Dodd calls
- the crisis of legitimization that taints officeholders and encourages
- widespread sentiments in favor of term limits. The movement
- seems to spring spontaneously out of the lower depths, producing
- autonomous local chapters with minimal nurturing required. In
- Colorado, for example, term-limits proponents spent only $2,500
- on what proved to be their victorious campaign to win approval
- for Amendment 17. Not that the movement isn't capable of raising
- money or organizing. Americans for Term Limits attracted $1.6
- million in the past election alone, and the National Term Limits
- Coalition tries to coordinate the activities of the plethora
- of groups across the country.
- </p>
- <p> "I think term limits are here to stay, regardless of what the
- Supreme Court does," says Winston Bryant, the Arkansas attorney
- general whose name is attached to the Supreme Court case and
- who will argue it this week. "It's a nationwide grass-roots
- movement. The states would pass a constitutional proposition
- quickly and easily. The holdup is in the Congress, and eventually
- that opposition will disappear." If not, that opposition may
- simply be voted out again.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-