
Maxine Waters is 87 years old and is once again seeking another term in Congress. This is not about her age. There are people in their eighties who are far more capable than those decades younger. The real issue is that Washington has transformed public office into a lifetime career. Politicians are no longer expected to serve for a period and return home. They stay for decades, accumulating power, influence, and connections until they begin to believe the office belongs to them rather than the people who elected them.
The Founding Fathers never intended Congress to become a country club where politicians collected paychecks for half a century. Public office was supposed to be service, not a career. They feared concentrated power, which is why the president is restricted by term limits. Yet members of Congress can remain in office indefinitely, building political machines that become almost impossible to defeat. There is something fundamentally wrong with that.
Once politicians realize they never have to leave, their priorities change. They stop worrying about the country and begin worrying about protecting their seat. Every vote becomes political. Every crisis becomes another excuse to spend money that does not exist. Every campaign is financed by the same lobbyists who expect something in return. Washington has become an industry whose product is legislation.
Look at the Mitch McConnell situation. People requested proof of life. No one requested that he stand down or step aside, despite his inability to fulfill his duties. “Oh, well, it’s fine because he won’t seek re-election.” Really? Has public office become a charity of sorts? If someone is no longer capable of serving today, then the question is not what happens after the next election. The question is why they are still making decisions that affect the lives of millions of Americans. Public office is a responsibility, not a lifetime entitlement that ends only when the politician decides it is time to leave.
Lindsey Graham was in politics for roughly 36 years, spending about 31 of those years in Congress. Yet every favorable news story claims he had a long career ahead of him. Only in America do we expect politicians to remain in their positions indefinitely, as if they were actually dedicating their lives to public service rather than self-interest.

History is very clear on this. Republics do not collapse because of one bad leader. They collapse when the political class becomes permanent. Rome reached that stage long before the empire officially fell. The government existed to preserve itself. Politicians fought over power while the people paid the price. Every empire eventually reaches the point where those in office believe they are entitled to remain there forever. That is always a warning sign that the system is in decline.
Term limits would not solve every problem, but they would be a start. Fresh blood matters. New ideas matter. More importantly, politicians would know there is an end to their time in office. They would have to return home and live under the very laws they passed instead of spending a lifetime insulated inside the Washington bubble.
This has never been about Maxine Waters alone. There are Republicans who have been in Congress for decades as well. The disease infects both parties equally. Washington has become a closed club where incumbents enjoy every advantage imaginable, taxpayer-funded staffs, massive fundraising operations, media attention, committee power, and connections that ordinary challengers simply cannot match. We tell ourselves elections are enough, but incumbency has become one of the strongest advantages in politics.
There comes a point when experience becomes an excuse for preserving power. Public office should never become a lifetime entitlement. No one should spend forty or fifty years writing laws for everyone else while never having to live in the real economy they created. If Congress had the courage to impose term limits on itself, it would probably be the first genuine reform Washington has enacted in decades. The fact that it never will tells you everything you need to know about the state of our republic.