http://www.realclearpolitics.c...sable_term_limits.html
"Advocates of term limits argue neither that political talent is irrelevant nor that it is ubiquitous. Rather, they argue that talent is not so scarce that the benefits of rotation in office must be sacrificed in order to prolong indefinitely a talented person's tenure in office. And they argue that the benefits of churning the talent pool exceed the costs of limiting tenures."
This is in the context of the Bloomberg announcement that he would like to run for another four year term. Bloomberg is very popular and has done a wonderful job for the most part. So, if it ain't broke, why fix it? Why move on to another mayor who might be much worse? Why pull Nolan Ryan in the 5th inning for a minor league unknown?
My view is that on the menu of solutions to the removal of a lousy government leader, term limits are the best known solution. Until we come up with a way to yank the chain on the lousy public servants that works, I'll go with term limits even if we lose an occasional great one, like Bloomberg.
-Robert
"Advocates of term limits argue neither that political talent is irrelevant nor that it is ubiquitous. Rather, they argue that talent is not so scarce that the benefits of rotation in office must be sacrificed in order to prolong indefinitely a talented person's tenure in office. And they argue that the benefits of churning the talent pool exceed the costs of limiting tenures."
This is in the context of the Bloomberg announcement that he would like to run for another four year term. Bloomberg is very popular and has done a wonderful job for the most part. So, if it ain't broke, why fix it? Why move on to another mayor who might be much worse? Why pull Nolan Ryan in the 5th inning for a minor league unknown?
My view is that on the menu of solutions to the removal of a lousy government leader, term limits are the best known solution. Until we come up with a way to yank the chain on the lousy public servants that works, I'll go with term limits even if we lose an occasional great one, like Bloomberg.
-Robert