Informal Amendments
Term Limits Franklin Roosevelt was not
wrong to violate the "no third term"
tradition. The "no third term" tradition
was set as a standard when
Washington was in office. After Washington
refused to run a third time, there
were many other presidents who followed
his lead. There should be no other
president to lead the country at a time of
strife, than the president that was
in the office at that time. There was no
written law that stated that a
president could not run for a third term. The
"no third term" policy
was just a precedent waiting to be broken. Informal
amendments aren't written in
stone, therefore, people have the right to
ignore them. The decision of
President Washington to refuse a third term
as President of the United States
started a precedent that persisted
stubbornly until 1940 (Permet 1). Washington
felt that even one term was a
lot, however, he was pressured by everyone to
finish his second term. He
could have run again, but he was getting old, and his
health and spirit were
diminished. Washington was no longer able to tolerate the
quarrelsomeness of
the factions within the government (Tugwell 45). Jefferson
thought the third
term was evil. He and many other men during his era had seen
too much of the
absolute monarchy in Europe, and they feared that under the
US
Constitution, a Chief Executive could be elected from four years to
four years
until it became a life term (Permet 4). Jefferson was asked, and
many of his
closest advisers nominated him for a third term. He declined the
offer. Most
people believed that he declined because he was losing support in
the government
and public due to failure in foreign policy. Now that a second
president turned
down the third term nomination, it was an unwritten law, and
no one would even
think of breaking the tradition. The next president who
turned down the third
term nomination was Jackson. Grant and Teddy Roosevelt
followed him. They all
had the same things in common. They were either burnt
out, their policies didn't
fly with the opposition, or they just couldn't cut
it anymore as a president.
Calvin Coolidge was nominated for a third
term, but Herbert Hoover got the
overall nomination. Coolidge didn't receive
the final nomination due to fatigue.
FDR made a gutsy move to run in the
1940 elections, moreover, it was a key move
to get the US back on track. In
1940, Franklin Roosevelt was re-elected for a
third term over Wendel Willkie.
With much past opposition to the third term
policy, FDR was a sure shoe in
for the third term. Other than Wendel Willkie, it
was very hard to imagine
anyone else taking over the responsibilities at the
time (Parmet 287). There
was still much opposition to the third term policy, but
at that time
Roosevelt was the right person to lead the country. The war time
emergency
helped FDR win the election. Rexford G. Tugwell, FDR’s good friend
and
advisor, said, "There is never a convenient time to ‘change horses in
the
middle of the stream’ (Tugwell 178)". Willkie wasn't the right one to
carry
out the New Deal. Republicans loathed the New Deal, and Willkie would
have
destroyed the rebuilding of the country’s economy. Also Willkie
surely
wasn’t going to get the U.S. out of WWII. FDR and Churchill provided
the
leadership that led to a great victory. The war in Europe was over, and
the end
of the pacific conflict was less than six months-away (Parmet 289).
Also,
Roosevelt basically saved the world from Hitler (Parmet 290). Mr.
Willkie
didn’t have the experience compared to FDR’s previous two other
terms.
Alexander Hamilton said in the Federalist Papers, in Paper number
72: It was
essential for the Chief executive to have the feeling that he
would be able to
finish what he had begun lest to hesitate to undertake a
project for the public
benefit because, "together with his own reputation,"
it might possible be
committed to "hands which might be unequal or unfriendly
to the task. (Parmet
2) I believe that it was morally right for FDR to
sever the age old "no third
term" tradition. There wasn’t any law that barred
him from running for his
third term. Roosevelt was even backed by some of his
old opponents. The big
money men hated him when he came into office in the
early 30’s, but in 1940
the big corporations loved him, and backed him for
all he was worth (Parmet 5).
Also, democracy is based on the people and
for the people. The people of the
1940’s wanted FDR back in office. The
only thing that might have kept him back
were the supporters of the old "no
third term" policy. Somebody was bound to
break the verbal law. It was not
written in stone, and the country needed
someone to take them out from rock
bottom. FDR felt that he needed to go back
into office. He knew he could win.
Other informal amendments are also not
written in stone, and they too could
be broken tastefully. The "no third
term" policy was broken in taste. The
country needed a president who could
lead them in a time of need. The U.S.
needed a man who could finish what he
started and more. I believe that if the
country would succeed without the
informal amendments, and they should be
abolished. However, if a single person
or groups of people are going to
deliberately break the verbal amendment for a
negative reason, then the
government should enforce it. It is all a judgement
call when it comes to the
demolition of informal
precedents.