Thursday, February 26, 2026

Watching The Founding Fathers' Fatal Oversight Playing Itself Out Right In Front of Us

Our Founding Fathers were geniuses.  They were far from perfect, but they were generally virtuous men, and they gifted us with a constitution far superior to anything that had ever been written.  The document they wrote was imperfect, as all things that men create are, but it was extraordinary nonetheless – even with the 3/5 Compromise

They gave us a system with a separation of powers, both within the federal government and between the federal and state governments. The Bill of Rights, which was basically the quid pro quo agreed to for ratification, extended that distribution of powers by recognizing that some rights belonged to the citizens and were largely beyond the power of government to impeach upon.

In hindsight however, the Founding Fathers made one fatal error, and we’re seeing it play out right in front of us today.  And it’s somewhat curious that they made it…

James Madison, the Father of the Constitution, read widely in preparation for writing it.  He read the writings of Enlightenment thinkers such as Locke and Montesquieu.  He looked at the Constitutions of the various American states.  And he studied governments throughout history such as the Dutch Republic, the Achaean League and of course, as practically all of the Founders did, the Roman Republic. 

And this is what puzzles me.  A critical element of the success of the Roman Republic was term limits, which were adopted for the specific purpose of preventing an individual from accumulating too much power and leading to a new monarchy.  Magistrates, from Quaestors (the entry level bureaucrat workhorses) to Consuls (highest ordinary office; supreme executive/military authority) whose terms ran 1 year each, were generally forbidden from being reelected to the same office for a decade. This ensured that the power remained with the office itself rather than the individual.

With very few exceptions – largely dictatorships, an office rarely called upon and usually for military emergencies – this system of checks allowed the Roman Republic to survive for half a millennium (509 – 27 BC).  What’s more, it was when these limits started to be ignored, first with the Gracchi Brothers and then Marius & Sulla, that the precipitous collapse of the Republic began.  Of course the Gracchi Brothers in particular were responding to a Senate that was intransigent about sharing power – and wealth – with the rest of Italy. (The Senate was largely hereditary and made up of the oldest families and richest men in Rome.)

It’s curious, knowing that Madison and the Founding Fathers were well aware of this history, that they didn’t feel the need to include term limits in our Constitution, particularly as they had included them in the Articles of Confederation.

There are of course reasons for that. Our Founding Fathers never imagined Congress would be a full-time endeavor.  It was a part time job, usually meeting maybe 6 months a year as travel was slow and most congressmen had farms or law practices or businesses that needed to be attended to back home. What’s more, initially there was not a great deal for the federal government to do.  Indeed, state governments, particularly Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York were far more compelling destinations for powerful men than Washington. Demonstrating this, John Jay, the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court stepped down to become Governor of New York, and when later President Adams reappointed him and the Senate confirmed him, he declined, citing the court’s lack of "the energy, weight and dignity which are essential to its affording due support to the national government."

At the end of the day, these combined to suggest to a majority of the delegates that term limits would be unnecessary and overly restrictive.

Sadly, that oversight is today starting to hemorrhage and the Republic’s future is at stake. 

From Georgia to Arizona to Minnesota, Americans are watching in real time as revelations about the coup d'état in 2020 finally see the light of day. Suddenly we’re seeing massive amounts of proof that that thing that Democrats warned about for years before the 2020 election, then swore was impossible after it, happened regularly.  Across the country and always in one direction.

Americans see this. And want to fix it, or at least 85% of the population does.  But they can’t. 

Why?  Because we have a handful of GOP senators who simply don’t care and there is little Americans can do about it.

But we have elections you might say. Sure, but they had elections in Soviet Russia too, and their incumbents won only slightly more often than ours. Soviets, with only one name on the ballot, invariably won reelection with averages of 99% of the vote.  But this is America and we have real competition and freedom of choice” you say.  And what is the average reelection rate for members of Congress?  Well, in 2024 it was… 97% for the House, up slightly from the 94% over the previous 3 decades and 87% in the Senate, down from the 100% in 2022 but exactly what its average was over the previous 35 years.   

As it relates to the problem at hand, the House has recently passed a revised SAVE Act which mandates Voter ID for voting and citizenship proof to register. One would think with 53 seats in the Senate the GOP should be able to pass the act and get it to President Trump’s desk in a New York minute.  But no. Why, because at least 3 senators with a combined tenure of 94 years have decided that they don’t care about honest elections, regardless of what the American people want.  Indeed, 85% of Americans support Voter ID. That level of support is extraordinary. You couldn’t get 85% of Americans to agree on the color of the sun, but they agree on Voter ID. 

But somehow, Susan Collins – 29 years in the Senate, Lisa Murkowski – 24 years, and Mitch McConnel – 41 years (and a revolving cast of a few other vacillating GOP Senators have decided that they know better than the American people.  They don’t care.

These three GOP Senators and a few vacillating others, along with every treacherous Democrat senator – other than maybe John Fetterman, are giving the American people the middle finger.  And they all can do so because they have a close to zero chance of ever facing consequences over their decisions.

And that’s where the problem is. Our Founding Fathers wrote a Constitution to control the nature of man. But they miscalculated. They thought the federal government would remain relatively weak compared to the states and the people. Today it’s anything but. Indeed, Washington has become the most powerful city in the world, controlling most of our lives and literally spending more money than the GDP of every country on Earth besides the US and China.  And because of that, serving in Congress today is the opposite of the part time civic duty the Founders had envisioned. It’s a vehicle for unprecedented power and the riches that brings.

The reality is, Washington has become a cesspool of corruption and the fact that half of Congress feel comfortable stonewalling an issue more popular than baseball and apple pie demonstrates that reality.   

The old saying goes “Power corrupts & absolute power corrupts, absolutely.” 90-98% reelection rates are about as close to absolute power as you can get in a theoretically “democratic” form of government. 

If America has any hope of saving itself on the eve of its 250th anniversary, this needs to be fixed, and there’s only one way to do it: Term limits.

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