Against Term Limits: Liberty Requires Vigilance, Not Automation

By: Kevin Tyson

An Appeal to Conservatives and Classical Liberals

In the American political imagination, term limits are often portrayed as a structural solution to corruption, elitism, and the inertia of entrenched power. For many on the center-right, they symbolize a necessary check against career politicians and the professionalization of governance. Yet beneath the intuitive appeal of this policy lies a contradiction with the foundational principles of self-government articulated by John Locke and embraced by classical liberalism. Term limits, far from empowering the citizen, lull the public into believing that political virtue can be mechanized. In truth, there is no substitute for an active, informed citizenry. Liberty cannot be delegated to an autopilot.

I. Locke and the Moral Demands of Self-Government

John Locke’s theory of government rests on a profound ethical premise: the legitimacy of political power derives from the ongoing consent of the governed. This is not a one-time transaction but a continuous process, requiring citizens to remain vigilant, rational, and morally engaged. For Locke, freedom is not merely a condition secured by institutions—it is the product of the people’s persistent attention to the character and behavior of those who govern them.

The modern push for term limits reflects, paradoxically, a decline in this very civic responsibility. Instead of cultivating judgment, term limits promise deliverance from the need to judge. They whisper, “Don’t worry about learning your representative’s record—he won’t be around long enough to matter.” This idea transforms politics into a revolving door of unfamiliar faces and unknown priorities, encouraging disengagement rather than participation.

II. Oligarchy by Another Name

Supporters of term limits often hope that enforced turnover will break the elites’ grip on public office. However, history and political theory suggest otherwise. Robert Michels’ “iron law of oligarchy” teaches us that in any complex organization, leadership tends to consolidate into the hands of a few. The form of government may change, but the structure of influence remains. When term-limited legislators cycle out, they are replaced not by fresh citizen-legislators, but by staffers, lobbyists, bureaucrats, and entrenched interest groups—the permanent apparatus of what is today called the deep state.

In practice, term limits increase the power of unelected actors. New legislators, stripped of institutional memory and policy experience, lean more heavily on civil servants, committee staffers, and outside consultants—many of whom have served longer than any term limit would allow. Instead of checking oligarchy, term limits merely relocate its center of gravity. We swap visible power for invisible power, electoral legitimacy for administrative permanence.

Moreover, the time preference inherent in the long-con—crime that transpires over longer periods of time as compared to smash-and-grab robberies—is reflected in the character of the criminals it attracts. Similarly, the political class fostered under short-term constraints will differ in character from those who engage with the polity over sustained periods, tending toward expediency and superficiality rather than statesmanship and depth.  As a certain proportion of those we employ to govern us must succumb to the demons of their baser natures, isn’t a better class of criminal preferable?

III. The False Promise of Automatic Reform

The conservative and classical liberal traditions both distrust utopian shortcuts. Edmund Burke warned against abstract schemes that flatten the organic development of institutions; Friedrich Hayek defended evolved systems over technocratic design; and Locke, too, envisioned liberty as the fruit of active moral and intellectual labor, not the product of political automation.

Term limits belong to the class of reforms that offer mechanistic solutions to moral problems. If voters are lazy, make their choices for them. If representatives grow corrupt, rotate them out regardless of merit. But this thinking misunderstands the problem. The rot in our politics is not merely in our politicians’ tenure but in our electorate’s apathy. The answer is not to reduce the voter’s responsibility, but to deepen it. As Tocqueville observed, the health of a republic depends not on the laws alone but on the habits of the people.

IV. The Real Alternative: Institutional Transparency and Civic Renewal

Rather than impose arbitrary expiration dates on legislators, we should focus on accountability on the part of the elected and the electors.  Only when citizens fulfill their obligations as informed participants in governance. We do not need to forcibly remove good representatives from office if we have the tools to remove bad ones by choice.

Above all, the renewal of liberty demands a cultural change, not a procedural one. Schools, communities, and families must revive the virtues of self-rule: attentiveness, prudence, and engagement. The individual citizen must embrace the obligations for which they are the obligors, such as jury duty and voting, recognizing these not as mere burdens but as integral components of civic virtue. This is slow work, but it is the only path consistent with a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.”

Conclusion: Responsibility, Not Rotation

Term limits may offer conservatives and classical liberals the illusion of control, but they undermine the very agency that gives meaning to self-government. As Locke reminds us, freedom requires more than protection—it requires participation. We cannot delegate our duties to mechanisms. We must rise to them. If we want liberty to endure, it must be because citizens have the courage to earn it again and again, not because we have designed systems that excuse us from trying.


This block post contributed by Kevin Tyson


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