ANALYSISApril 13, 2026
Should Congress have term limits?
In the 119th Congress (2025–2026), multiple Republican-led resolutions have been introduced proposing constitutional amendments to impose term limits on members of Congress, including measures from Senators Ted Cruz, Katie Britt, and Dave McCormick. Simultaneously, a state-level movement is pushing toward a constitutional convention, with Indiana potentially becoming the tenth state to call for one. Public support for term limits remains historically high, with polls showing 83–87% of Americans in favor.
If voters keep reelecting the same people for decades, is that democracy working — or democracy being gamed? And if we force them out, are we protecting the republic or just throwing away the people who actually know how it runs?
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Elections as accountability mechanism
C
When more than one-third of the Senate is over 70 and the 119th Congress is the third oldest in American history, the electoral mechanism the Founders trusted has visibly broken down. Elections were supposed to be the check on congressional entrenchment. They are not functioning as one. That is not a talking point — it is a structural failure.
L
The electoral mechanism isn't broken — it's being gamed. The incumbency advantages compounding over time are name recognition, franking privileges, gerrymandered districts, and campaign finance networks that insulate members regardless of performance. Fix those and you restore the mechanism the Founders actually designed rather than amputating the limb because the circulation is poor.
C
If those fixes were coming, they would have come. Ranked-choice voting and redistricting reform have been on the progressive agenda for decades with minimal federal traction — meanwhile incumbents keep winning and Congress keeps aging. At some point 'fix the underlying problem' becomes an argument for doing nothing.
L
That's a counsel of impatience dressed as structural analysis. The 22nd Amendment took years of sustained political effort after FDR's four terms — the conservative standard for constitutional patience shouldn't change just because a different reform is inconvenient.
Power shifting to unelected lobbyists
C
The liberal objection — that term limits drain expertise and hand power to lobbyists — actually concedes the core problem. If unelected actors already hold substantial power in Congress, term limits don't create that condition, they expose it. The answer is to tackle the lobbying apparatus directly, not to preserve career politicians as a counterweight to the influence industry they helped build.
L
Exposing a problem and solving it are different things. Rotating out the member every twelve years removes the one person in that building who faces voters, while the pharmaceutical veteran with thirty years of committee relationships stays exactly where they are. You've described the dynamic correctly and then prescribed a cure that makes the patient weaker.
C
Congress has deeper staff infrastructure and professional capacity than the state legislatures where the worst lobbyist-capture dynamics actually occurred — experienced legislative staff can carry institutional continuity across member turnover. The risk you're describing is real, but it's addressable through deliberate staff retention, not by locking in indefinite member tenure.
L
Staff serve members, not constituents — a freshman senator dependent on inherited staff is more K Street-legible, not less, because they lack the relationships and scar tissue to know when they're being played.
22nd Amendment as reform precedent
C
The Constitutional Convention debated mandatory rotation for Congress and rejected it — but the 22nd Amendment shows the constitutional order is capable of learning from experience. Americans watched FDR serve four terms and concluded that indefinite executive tenure distorts incentives in ways elections alone can't correct. The same logic applies to legislators who have served 30 or 40 years and built institutional empires insulated from electoral pressure.
L
The 22nd Amendment analogy breaks at the point of institutional design. A single executive accumulates singular power — one person, one removal. Congress has 535 members whose collective expertise is a distributed asset, not a concentrated threat. Rotating out every experienced appropriator simultaneously doesn't look like removing FDR; it looks like firing your entire senior staff on a fixed schedule.
C
Nobody is proposing to remove every experienced member simultaneously — staggered limits would mean turnover is gradual, not a cliff edge. The 22nd Amendment didn't remove all previous presidents at once either.
L
Staggered or not, the endpoint is the same: the most senior members, who chair committees and carry institutional weight, hit their limit precisely when they've accumulated the expertise to use power effectively — and the lobbyist across the table never does.
Whom term limits actually protect
C
Eighty-three percent of Americans — 80% of Democrats, 86% of Republicans, 84% of Independents — support term limits. When that level of consensus exists and nothing moves, the system is not representing the people. It is insulating itself from them. That is the clearest possible evidence that this reform serves voters, not incumbents.
L
Polling support for a concept and understanding its consequences are different things. The populations most harmed by rotating out experienced legislators are those who most depend on federal programs — Medicaid recipients, disability advocates, environmental communities running multi-year legislative campaigns. Their champions accumulate power slowly through seniority. The 83% who told a pollster they liked term limits in the abstract didn't vote to hand those committee seats to lobbyists.
C
The argument that vulnerable populations need a Barbara Mikulski-style champion to survive the system is actually an indictment of the system — it admits that ordinary constituents can only get results if they find a patron with 30 years of seniority. That's not democracy, that's clientelism.
L
Clientelism with a champion who delivers Medicaid funding beats procedural purity that hands the same committee to a freshman who doesn't know what a reconciliation bill is yet — vulnerable constituents don't have the luxury of waiting for structural reform to mature.
Article V convention procedural risk
C
The Article V convention path deserves serious attention precisely because it bypasses self-interested incumbents who would never vote to limit their own tenure — the 1994 Contract with America proved that: a term limits amendment passed a House majority but couldn't reach two-thirds because incumbents protected themselves. Indiana moving toward becoming the tenth state to call a convention is meaningful pressure.
L
No Article V convention has ever been convened under the current Constitution — its procedures, delegate authority, and scope limitations are entirely untested. Conservatives who believe in institutional stability should be the last people betting structural reform on a mechanism that constitutional scholars can't agree would stay limited to its original purpose once convened.
C
The alternative — waiting for Congress to voluntarily limit its own power — has a thirty-year track record of failure. Some procedural uncertainty is preferable to guaranteed paralysis.
L
Procedural uncertainty in a constitutional convention isn't a minor implementation risk — it's a potential runaway process that could touch provisions nobody agreed to revisit, which is why pursuing both tracks simultaneously, as even the conservative argument concedes, is the only defensible position.
Conservative's hardest question
The most serious challenge to this argument is the political science research showing that term-limited state legislatures often see power shift toward lobbyists, executive agencies, and permanent staff rather than toward voters — meaning term limits can inadvertently weaken democratic accountability rather than strengthen it. This is difficult to dismiss because it is empirically grounded, and the federal version of this dynamic, with its vast permanent bureaucracy and K Street lobbying apparatus, could plausibly be more severe than what state-level evidence captures.
Liberal's hardest question
The research on term limits shifting power to lobbyists comes primarily from state legislatures, which differ structurally from Congress in staffing levels, professional capacity, and media scrutiny — a conservative critic could fairly argue the federal context is different enough that the analogy does not hold cleanly. That objection is not easily dismissed.
Both sides agree: Both sides accept that Congress is already substantially shaped by unelected actors — lobbyists, permanent staff, and executive agencies — and that this represents a genuine democratic accountability failure, not a hypothetical one.
The real conflict: The central factual and predictive dispute is whether the state-level evidence of lobbyist capture following term limits translates to the federal context — conservatives argue Congress's deeper staff infrastructure makes the dynamic more manageable, liberals argue it makes the permanent lobbying apparatus more dangerous, and neither side has direct federal evidence to settle it.
What nobody has answered: If term limits shift power toward lobbyists and permanent staff who never face voters, and the status quo already concentrates power among those same actors, what specific mechanism in either reform agenda actually returns power to ordinary constituents rather than simply rearranging which unelected professionals hold it?
Sources
- January 2025 public opinion poll on congressional term limits (83% support, bipartisan breakdown)
- Pew Research Center survey on congressional term limits (87% adult support)
- Senate resolution introduced by Cruz and Britt, January 2025 (119th Congress)
- H.J.Res.12 and H.J.Res.5 text and summaries, 119th Congress
- McCormick joint resolution, April 10, 2025
- U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton, 514 U.S. 779 (1995)
- Indiana State Senate resolution on Article V constitutional convention
- U.S. Term Limits (USTL) organization state-level campaign data, 2026
- DeSantis–Trone joint op-ed, New York Times, fall 2025
- Congressional age composition data, 118th and 119th Congresses