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To: Snardius
From usconstitution.net:

22nd Amendment

Since the presidency of George Washington, only one thing could be said to be totally consistent - that no President had the job for more than two full terms. Washington had been asked to run for a third term in 1796, but he made it quite clear that he had no intention of doing so; that an orderly transition of power was needed to set the Constitution in stone. And so it was for almost 150 years.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt was first elected President in 1932, and re-elected in 1936. When it came time for the Democrats to nominate a candidate for the Presidency in 1940, two things had happened. First, the Republicans had made great gains in Congress in the 1938 elections. And Hitler happened. Europe was in the throes of a great war, with trouble in the Pacific, too. A change away from Roosevelt, who had led the nation through the Great Depression, did not seem wise. He was nominated for an unprecedented third term, and won. It was not a landslide victory, however, and it is debatable that FDR would have had a third term had it not been for the war. When 1944 rolled around, changing leaders in the middle of World War II, which the United States was now fully engaged in, also seemed unwise, and FDR ran for and was elected to, a fourth term.

His life was nearly over, however, and his Vice President, Harry Truman, became President upon FDR's death less than 100 days after his inauguration. Though FDR's leadership was seen by many as a key reason that the U.S. came out of WWII victorious, the Congress was determined, once the war ended, to ensure that Washington's self-imposed two-term limit become the law of the land. Specifically excepting Truman from its provisions, the 22nd Amendment passed Congress on March 21, 1947. After Truman won a second term in 1948, it was ratified on February 27, 1951 (1,439 days). Truman could have run for a third term, but bowed out early before campaigning began.

26 posted on 08/31/2007 7:28:54 AM PDT by Virginia Ridgerunner ("Si vis pacem para bellum")
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To: Virginia Ridgerunner

We desperately need term limits for all U.S. Senators and Representatives. In general, the worst, most self-serving individuals in Congress are those who have been there the longest. These people are causing great harm to America and her future.


37 posted on 08/31/2007 7:43:38 AM PDT by Lions Gate
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To: Virginia Ridgerunner
...an orderly transition of power was needed to set the Constitution in stone.

Clinton-Gore-Kerry-Carville-Dean have seen an end to that.

90 posted on 08/31/2007 10:04:23 AM PDT by weegee (NO THIRD TERM. America does not need another unconstitutional Clinton co-presidency.)
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To: Virginia Ridgerunner
Truman demonstrated FDR was not as indispensable as he so arrogantly believed.

I'm still bitter over the god-like reverence given FDR in light of his ruinous domestic policies, a consuming addiction to power despite failed health, disregard for Holocaust refugees and a horrifying blindness to the growing evil that was Joseph Stalin.

We're in a very bad situation if we return to a Clinton, especially one with such a calculating personality and lifelong craven lust for personal power.

103 posted on 08/31/2007 11:11:25 AM PDT by newzjunkey
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