+ why aid isn't flowing in Gaza US Edition - Today's top story: Term limits aren't the answer [View in browser]( US Edition | 16 May 2024 [The Conversation]
[The Conversation]( Are you frustrated that Congress canât get anything done? Tired of all the politicking instead of governing? Ready to throw the bums out? Then youâre among the 80% of Americans who are in favor of congressional term limits. âYouâd be hard pressed to find another policy that more Americans from both sides of the aisle agree on,â writes Charlie Hunt, a political scientist from Boise State University. The thinking behind term limits, Hunt writes, is that a new crop of elected leaders will produce âa more effective and perhaps less polarized Congress.â Wrong. Hunt and other political scientists say term limits arenât the fix for what ails Congress. In fact, they can â[create more problems than they solve](,â he writes. The blunt instrument that is terms limits reflects a failure to credit âthe benefits of representatives who have been serving in office for a long time,â writes Hunt. âThese members have had more time to gain knowledge and experience about Congress as an institution; develop policy expertise in issues important to their districts; and cultivate working relationships with fellow members that help them make policy more effectively.â Also in this weekâs politics news: - [Preying on white fears is a well-worn political playbook](
- [Labor historian gives Biden high marks](
- [The costs, now and in the future, of rebuilding Ukraine]( Naomi Schalit Senior Editor, Politics + Democracy
Would term limits lead to a more effective and less polarized Congress? Andrey Denisyuk/Getty Images
[Term limits arenât the answer]( Charlie Hunt, Boise State University Very few Americans believe Congress is doing a good job. Some of them have a simple solution: Throw the bums out and institute term limits. But that creates more problems than it solves.
Aid trucks loaded with supplies wait in Arish, Egypt, after a border crossing with Gaza was closed on May 8, 2024. Ali Moustafa/Getty Images
[Iâve spent decades overseeing relief operations around the world, and hereâs whatâs going wrong in Gaza]( Raymond Offenheiser, University of Notre Dame A United Nations agency known as UNRWA is the main player in crisis response in Gaza â but Israel will no longer work with UNRWA, and border crossings are not consistent in getting aid through.
Haitians deported from the Dominican Republic head back across the border. Steven Aristil/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
[Haitians looking to escape violence and chaos face hostility in neighboring Dominican Republic]( Edlin Veras, Swarthmore College With legal routes to the US curtailed, many Haitians are looking to cross the border into the Dominican Republic â but a shaky reception awaits. [Confusion over how pregnancy dates are measured is widespread â and makes for uninformed debate over abortion limits]( Laurel Elder, Hartwick College; Mary-Kate Lizotte, Augusta University; Steven Greene, North Carolina State University Most Americans surveyed did not know how pregnancies are dated or how long a trimester is â but this is especially true among some groups, like people who say they support six-week abortion bans. [An obscure provision of Ohio law could keep Biden off the ballot there in November]( Jonathan Entin, Case Western Reserve University Ohio remains stuck with a deadline that wonât allow Joe Biden, running for reelection, to appear on the November ballot. The GOP-run Legislature does not appear to want to fix the problem. [The price of rebuilding Ukraine goes up each day â but shirking the bill will cost even more]( Jeffrey Kucik, University of Arizona The World Bank estimates that it will take $480 billion of investment to get Ukraine back on its feet after the war. [Plant-based meat alternatives are trying to exit the culture wars â an impossible task?]( S. Marek Muller, Texas State University; David Rooney, The University of Texas at Austin As vegan meat companies lose revenue, one company is trying a new packaging approach to bring in new consumers. But this step is unlikely to help end the âMeat Culture War.â -
[You should call House members ârepresentatives,â because thatâs what they are â not âcongressmenâ or âcongresswomenâ]( Daniel Wirls, University of California, Santa Cruz Members of the House of Representatives relish their connection to their districts and their constituents. So why are they called âCongressmanâ or âCongresswomanâ instead of âRepresentativeâ? -
[A sex scandal thatâs boring the public â and a judge forced to keep Trump focused]( David E. Clementson, University of Georgia; John E. Jones III, Dickinson College A former judge and an expert on political communication dissect the most recent week of Donald Trumpâs hush-money trial. -
[Preying on white fears worked for Georgiaâs Lester Maddox in the â60s â and is working there for Donald Trump today]( David Cason, University of North Dakota Ardent segregationist Lester Maddox became governor of Georgia after earning the admiration of white voters by refusing to integrate his chicken restaurant. -
[Bidenâs labor report card: Historian gives âUnion Joeâ a higher grade than any president since FDR]( Erik Loomis, University of Rhode Island Biden is arguably the most pro-union occupant of the White House since the New Deal. -
[Rap âbeefâ as public spectacle is a dangerous game that artists rarely win]( A.D. Carson, University of Virginia Since rapâs emergence, artists have boasted about themselves in ways that were funny and sometimes violent, vulgar and sexist. The popularity of the music and its exploitation can be dangerous. -
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