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- Skidmore proposes statewide protections for transgender people as Tampa enacts rule locally
- Get your Bill McCollum autograph today! GOP reigns supreme on eBay (updated)
- Unemployment in Florida reaches 11.2 percent; debate over federal aid continues
- Rubio within 10 points of Crist? So says Daily Kos poll
- Sink’s CFO office chief to move to campaign
- AG race could be a contest of dog lovers
- Meek tries to pin down Crist on unemployment compensation aid
- Rubio backer collects $$ from Crist buddies
- GOP “emergency meeting” tomorrow; Okaloosa party votes against Greer
- Dockery snags endorsement from former GOP chairman Tom Slade
- Erin Isaac’s resignation letter
- Aronberg gets painters’ union endorsement
- AARP: Poll shows members support health care reform
- New “fair and balanced” Tally news service coming?
- Today’s number: 35, average age for high blood pressure in military
Sen. Mike Bennett is again pitching a Constitutional amendment that would stretch term limits for state lawmakers from eight consecutive years to 12. This time, the plan comes with a twist: new term limits for elected local officials, too.
Bennett proposed 12-year term limits for state lawmakers last session, by tacking it on to Sen. Dave Aronberg’s proposed property tax discount for military veterans. Bennett let his amendment drop after House leaders declared it would sink the veterans initiative. (The veterans tax break then passed and will appear on the 2010 ballot.)
At the time, Bennett said he had proposed the amendment because he had missed the bill filing deadline. This time around he’s ahead of schedule, and has expanded the legislation to create new, 12-year term limits for county and city officers as well.
“The people in the state of Florida have shown they like term limits,” said Bennett, who’s still shopping for a House sponsor. “This opens up the whole idea.”
His proposal would also extend the length of service for House members ands senators between elections. Representatives would be elected for four years at a time instead of two; senators would be elected for six years at a time instead of four. That, Bennett argues, will let lawmakers focus more on their jobs and less on campaigns. (Note: Bennett terms out in 2010, before the proposal could take effect.)
Florida voters approved the “Eight Is Enough” limit in 1992; as recently as April, polls were still showing that most remain happy with that decision. But skeptics argue the current system has made short-term lawmakers too dependent on staff and beholden to lobbyists. Would voters be willing to extend legislative terms, if it meant they could slap local officials with new limits at the same time? Stay tuned; we expect that state lawmakers will be pondering the same question.
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