The law is only as good as the political will to enforce it.
For some systems, it’s a flaw to exploit. For others, it’s the lever of power.
Still waiting on someone to spend political capital to enforce the law. They will go down in history as the Savior of Democracy(TM).
#SistersInLaw
03.08.2025 15:00
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There is a non-voting House member from DC, but, much like the popular vote, it’s all kinda for show. DC should be a state, but I guess our Government is only cool with throwing them a bone in the form of 23A for now.
03.04.2025 13:26
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This Amendment did not give DC any other form of representation, like a voting seat in the House or Senate.
03.04.2025 13:26
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If DC were a state, they’d probably get the same number of electors as they have now - 3 - so this seems fair right now. It’s kinda sad, though, that the electorate in DC is dependent on whether Wyoming has a baby boom or not.
03.04.2025 13:26
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The Amendment says they can have the number of electors as they should if they were a State, EXCEPT that they can’t have more electors than the least populous state. That state today is Wyoming, with just under 600k people. Washington, DC, has just over 700k people.
03.04.2025 13:26
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With 23A, they now get to have their voices heard…kinda.
I mean, we are talking about choosing electors for the Electoral College, which is not really about hearing the voice of the people. But I digress….
03.04.2025 13:26
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Sadly, though, people who lived in DC - mainly the people who make it work on a daily basis - were disenfranchised from having electors represent them in the Electoral College that chooses our President and VP unless they were registered in an actual State.
03.04.2025 13:26
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This was our nation’s original game of hot potato.
03.04.2025 13:26
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DC was established all the way back in the beginning of the US, mainly because the Founders couldn’t agree where the capital should be. Some States wanted it in their State. Others didn’t want it in their State. While still others did not want it in other certain States.
03.04.2025 13:26
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Amendment 23 performs a kindness to the people living in our nation’s capital, Washington, DC. Starting with its ratification in 1961, DC residents could now choose electors to represent them in the Electoral College that chooses the President and Vice President.
03.04.2025 13:26
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They had seven years to ratify this amendment, and it took the States 4-ish years to get to the required number. But they got it and it’s law. I just hope we have the political will to uphold it.
02.04.2025 13:58
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The only person who could have run for a third term is long dead - Harry S Truman, who was President when Congress put this amendment forward in 1947 and ratified in 1951. Nobody after 1951 can be allowed to run for President more than twice. No. Body.
02.04.2025 13:58
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This is not unclear.
02.04.2025 13:58
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So, no one - not any person - can be ELECTED President more than twice. And if you somehow got to be President for more than two years without being elected, like because a President died or resigned or was convicted by the Senate and ousted, you also can’t be elected President more than once.
02.04.2025 13:58
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“No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.”
02.04.2025 13:58
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Thus, 22A is pretty straightforward:
02.04.2025 13:58
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FDR did the peaceful part, just not the transfer part.
02.04.2025 13:58
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OG President Washington did one right thing by leaving office after two terms and retiring to Mt. Vernon. He knew we didn’t want a king-like executive serving a lifetime of terms. The peaceful transfer of power has been a positive hallmark of our nation.
02.04.2025 13:58
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Amendment 22 limits the terms of the President, mainly because FDR broke over a century of tradition and ran and won the office of President not once, not twice, not thrice, but four times. (Sadly, there is not a word like “thrice” for four. It’s a missed opportunity.)
02.04.2025 13:58
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Are you feeling (Amendment) 22? You should be. It may be the only thing standing in the way of disaster, y’all.
02.04.2025 13:58
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So, ending Prohibition was one good thing came from The Great Depression…
01.04.2025 12:51
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2. They gave this one a seven-year ratification deadline. They sent it to the States in February, and it was ratified by December. It was 1933, so I’m just saying that people really needed a string drink or three to deal with things.
01.04.2025 12:51
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1. It’s super easy to remember - the drinking age is the amendment number!
01.04.2025 12:51
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Raise a glass to Amendment 21! This amendment had one job: to repeal Amendment 18. It did its job beautifully! Prost!
I only have 2 things to say about Amendment 21.
01.04.2025 12:51
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They gave this one 7 years, and even though it is boring and nonsensical, it didn’t even take a year for it to be ratified.
Calm down, Government, and let the process work itself out!
31.03.2025 13:14
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Sections 5 and 6 don’t add anything except those weird timing clauses. I don’t know why they started putting time restrictions on these amendments starting early last century. All of the prior amendments were ratified pretty soon after they were put to the States.
31.03.2025 13:14
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Or it’s saying that the House or Senate can put a hit out on people? It also talks about “the right of choice” devolving on the House and Senate, which is not about abortion, I don’t think? Please revise, Government.
31.03.2025 13:14
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What?? “Provide for the case of death of any persons”?? “From whom the House…may choose a President”?? The diagramming on this one is WILD!!Grammatically, it seems to say dead people can be appointed President (by the House) or VP (by the Senate)?
31.03.2025 13:14
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and for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the Senate may choose a Vice President whenever the right of choice shall have devolved upon them.”
31.03.2025 13:14
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“The Congress may by law provide for the case of the death of any of the persons from whom the House of Representatives may choose a President whenever the right of choice shall have devolved upon them,
31.03.2025 13:14
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