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The Perils of Predetermined Departure: Founding Fears in a Term-Limited Era

President Donald J. Trump's governing style, marked by ambitious gambles and immediate political gratification, is raising profound questions about the enduring stability of American governance.

Apr 26, 2026 - Politics & Policy

The Perils of Predetermined Departure: Founding Fears in a Term-Limited Era

Author By Vivian Holloway

President Donald J. Trump's governing style, marked by ambitious gambles and immediate political gratification, is raising profound questions about the enduring stability of American governance.

Why it matters: President Trump's "short-sighted bets," made by a term-limited executive unburdened by future accountability, are generating "long-term liabilities" that fulfill a profound historical warning. The Federalist Papers explicitly cautioned that "a fifth ill effect of the exclusion would be, that it would operate as a constitutional interdiction of stability in the administration. By necessitating a change of men... it would necessitate a mutability of measures." This starkly reflects current policy volatility. This accelerating "imperial presidency" risks leaving successors with "fatal inconveniences of fluctuating councils and a variable policy." The system designed to prevent despotism may, ironically, be catalyzing institutional instability, a challenging legacy for the republic to inherit, far beyond any single midterm election.

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The King's Ransom: Executive Bargain Echoes Founding Fears

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