cthia wrote:Annachie wrote:No Don. Being Presidentvand being elected to the Presidency are two different things, as 9 people prove.
I can run for President. I can even win and be elected. I just can't assume the office.
Language matters, and if your arguement is that two different things are the same, then you have no arguement.
Or to put it differently, if they ment it to be the way you think then they would not have refered to elections.
Absolutely. "Serve" and "elected" are two distinct concepts within the Constitution itself. So why shouldn't it be different concepts within this discussion.
The Constitution itself uses "serve" to explain the possibility of a president to be in office for ten years, if he has "served" no more than two years of a previous president's term, to still be eligible to be "elected" to two full terms.
Yes, language matters. But so does intent. To talk about a back door in this situation would take things down a path that the framers of the amendment were not wanting to go. Whether you are talking serving two terms or being elected to two terms, what the framers had in mind was they didn't want a president to serve more than two terms, the exception for the vp being noted.
To illustrate the point, consider Truman. After Roosevelt's death, he served all but a few months of Roosevelt's final term. As a consequence, he could only be elected once to a new term since he had already served his first term in office. That is what I am trying to get at.
As you say, language does matter. Lawyers parse it all the time. But taking language and applying it in ways that the originators did not intend ultimately reduces the discussion to absurdity.
I remember a joke we had back in seminary... Judas went and hanged himself.... Jesus said, "go and do likewise." That little joke illustrates the importance of intent and context.
Don
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