Thus far, descriptive findings show bipartisan public support for term limits at a level that could possibly spur congressional action on the statutory proposal, but probably not at the consensus level required for a constitutional amendment. From this data, the reform with the highest consensus levels, and perhaps the highest likelihood of becoming a constitutional amendment, is penalizing government officials for noncompliance. The five least popular reforms with large partisan divisions, even the ones that have bare majority support from the public, would most likely be dead on arrival as either constitutional amendments or statutory proposals. And some of those less popular reforms, such as requiring judicial elections rather than appointments, would require constitutional amendments.
Another important factor for understanding whether public support can spur congressional action centers on the stability of public support. If public support changes drastically as a function of Court decisions or political events, then that support is more ephemeral than persistent. Politicians may perceive such support as instrumental as opposed to principled and regard that as an unreliable foundation on which to make a case for policy change. If support is more principled and stable, politicians can draw on bipartisan public support that can also “weather political storms” as justification for official action.
Figure 3 displays support for term limits and two other reforms across six time periods. For two other projects (including an article on the 2020 election), my collaborator, Eric Kramon, and I deliberately fielded surveys before and after significant events, such as the challenges to the 2020 election results and the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization opinion overturning a constitutional right to an abortion. We chose the following six time periods:
- Early October 2020, after Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death and after Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination, but before Barrett’s confirmation
- Late October 2020, after Barrett was confirmed but before Election Day
- November 2020, after the election was called for Joe Biden
- December 2020, after the Supreme Court dismissed the Trump-backed lawsuit challenging the election results
- Late January 2021 and April 2021, after Biden was inaugurated
- September 2022, November 2022, and March 2023, after Dobbs
The point of Figure 3 is to compare the stability of term limits with two other reforms that are illustrative of different patterns. Note that Figure 3 displays support among all survey respondents as well as support among Democrats and Republicans.
Figure 3A shows that, on the whole, support for term limits is fairly stable over time, even across some tumultuous political events. Polarizing movements among partisans — with support from Democrats increasing and Republicans decreasing — occur following two events: Barrett’s confirmation, which followed a highly politicized process where Republicans reversed course from 2016 on election-year appointments, and Dobbs, an ideologically charged decision. Both events, which favored conservative Republican interests, once again show the consequences of Democrats as outpartisans and Republicans as copartisans. Importantly, these changes are not substantial, and the first change is somewhat short-lived. Moreover, changes in Democratic support are occurring around a very high baseline average of over 80 percent. That Republican support hovers around the 50 percent threshold at times suggests that Republican support could be a bit more tenuous.
The degree of stability, including partisan stability, in support for term limits falls somewhere in between that of support for overturning rulings via referendum (Figure 3B) and penalizing government officials for noncompliance (Figure 3C). For the former, the obvious pattern in Figure 3B is the large and polarizing partisan change following Dobbs. This Court-curbing reform is particularly susceptible to change following ideologically charged Supreme Court decisions like Dobbs. Additionally, the change is occurring around the majority threshold (50 percent), which cuts against the broad-based bipartisan support required to spur congressional action. After Dobbs, Democratic support for overturning rulings via referendum increased by 16 percentage points, while Republican support decreased by 8 points. Moreover, from postelection 2020 to Biden’s inauguration, Democratic support decreased, while Republican support increased, which is most likely rooted in the anticipation that Biden would have the ability to appoint justices to fill future Court vacancies.
Finally, Figure 3C shows that public support for penalizing government officials for noncompliance is mostly stable and at very high levels for both Democrats and Republicans. Though the decrease in Democratic support after Dobbs is about 10 percent, that post-Dobbs level of support is still a very high 80 percent.
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Public support for term limits is quite high, has bipartisan support, and is relatively stable. The results show a general public demand for changes to the appointment process and justices’ tenure. These features of public support for term limits as well as mandatory retirement age could possibly mobilize congressional action on statutory measures that require majority passage and a presidential signature.
Brandon L. Bartels is a professor of political science at George Washington University.