First of all,
@-Jim- and
@ryanosaur plus all other readers … I apologize for the heat in my response yesterday. Within US society, the words
partisan or
non-partisan mean with respect to party politics. In the USA that means Democratic or Republican party politics. My words yesterday were certainly passionate, but I did not mean them to be 'partisan' in the sense I've describe above. That may be different in Canada, or even in some areas of the USA.
With that said, I do stand by my opposition to broad restrictions to any elected office in this country, such as age or term limits. In the past, even if well meaning, these restrictions can & do have unintended consequences that all people regret, regardless of their party politics.
In the particular cases of Diane Feinstein or Mitch McConnell, we see elderly senators whose obvious declining health clearly threaten their ability to function in office. They should have the good sense to step down. Sen. Feinstein, only when coerced in private, seems to have finally accepted that. But so far, Sen. McConnell stubbornly clings to his power. No one within his party can summon the will to tell him it's time to step down. Their reasons seem to come with the roles they have been expected to fill for years, to embrace their own party while resisting the efforts of their opposing party – for better or worse.
I have directly seen the unintended consequences of broadly worded, well meaning, new regulations on term limits in elected office in the local county government where I live. It forced out of office people who have served well and continued to have broad voter support. They were younger than I am, so there was no question of age or poor health. The only people who seemed to benefit were inexperienced but ambitious (power hungry?) politicians who stepped up to replace them. It certainly did not serve the public well to loose the services some highly experienced elected officials whose good judgement & continuing popular support provided very good reasons to re-elect them.
Because of that, I strongly oppose age limits or term limits. If implemented, it must be
carefully thought out in advance by reasonable & responsible people. I don't see that in most of today's highly partisan talk about Biden, Trump, or others being too old for office.
In the US, we already have a constitutional limit to two presidential terms. It was the result of partisan politics in the decade after Franklin Roosevelt was re-elected a 4th time and soon died months after he was re-inaugurated. He had been re-elected because of his service during severe economic and war times crises. However, the two-term-limit restriction is a done deal, and I don't propose that we change that again.
For what it's worth, I also don't agree with the idea that a sitting US president should be re-elected to another term only because of war time. In my life, I've seen two presidents (Nixon and W) who deliberately sought & won re-election for that very reason. In my own opinion, I thought neither of them deserved it. Therefore, I would never advocate such reasons to re-elect a president, or to prevent them from doing so in the future. The future unintended consequences can be severe & unwanted.
However, I do advocate reforming & revising the existing methods by which we can remove a president from office. The present rules of impeaching a sitting president do not work, primarily because partisan politics has interfered with common sense. I don't know how impeachment should be revised, but it must be very carefully considered.