Time To Eliminate The Congressional Gerontocracy

Gerontocracy? Yep the rule by old farts.

I have a pet peeve, I know I have many, but this one is paramount in our government….it is time for the reform of Congress to begin and please start with the amount of old farts that stumble through the governing process.

Let’s look at today’s Congress just a few things….Pelosi age 84 falls and has to have a hip replacement, then there is the head GOPer in the Senate, McConnell age 82,  who over the last few years has fallen multiple times that last time in messed up his wrist and now we have a sitting Representative that is in a care home….let’s not forget about the senile old fart that was over 100 years old and still serving in Congress…..

Concerns that elected officials in Congress are too old resurfaced over the weekend following news that retiring U.S. Rep. Kay Granger, 81, has been residing at a senior living facility, according to her son. Granger has not cast a vote since July.

On Friday, the outlet The Dallas Express published an investigation into Granger’s whereabouts, reporting that Granger (R-Texas) is currently living at Tradition Senior Living in Fort Worth, which provides memory care services. Granger’s son, Brandon Granger, said that his mother is not in the memory care facility, but he said she does reside at Tradition Senior Living, according to The Dallas Morning News. The outlet also reported that her son said she has been “having some dementia issues late in the year.”

Reacting to the news on Sunday, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) wrote: “Kay Granger’s long absence reveals the problem with a Congress that rewards seniority & relationships more than merit & ideas. We have a sclerotic gerontocracy.”

“American gerontocracy, on both sides of the political aisle, is an absolute embarrassment,” wrote the journalist Mehdi Hasan on Saturday.

The journalist Ken Klippenstein echoed these remarks. In a post on Bluesky he argued it shouldn’t be taboo for the media to point out when elected officials appear to be impaired by age. “Part of why the gerontocracy exists is because the news media is so squeamish about calling this stuff out,” he wrote.

According to a breakdown from The Washington Post in 2023, the median age in Congress has been trending upward in recent decades. Last year, 48% of all members of Congress were Baby Boomers, and 19 lawmakers elected to the 118th Congress are members of the Silent Generation, meaning they were born at some point between 1928 and 1945.

After the 2024 presidential race, during which President Joe Biden stepped down as the presumptive Democratic nominee following a disastrous debate performance that sparked widespread concerns that he was not fit to run, there was some reshuffling of the Democratic leadership on congressional committees which saw younger lawmakers take over. However, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), 35, was unsuccessful in her bid to be the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee. She was bested by 74-year-old Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.)

Pod Save America co-host Dan Pfeiffer indicated that the thinking that drove some members to favor Connolly is also what was behind Democrats’ loss of the White House on November 5.

“Valuing seniority over political and messaging chops is exactly how Democrats got into this mess in the first place,” he wrote on X in mid-December.

(commondreams.org)

Time for this to be addressed……even the presidency is full of old farts with lots of backward thinking….this country needs forward thinkers not old farts grasping at the past.

Anything to add?

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

11 thoughts on “Time To Eliminate The Congressional Gerontocracy

  1. No age limits on holding office is a huge issue here with our House of Lords Upper Chamber. Most of them are so old they are all sleeping through every important debate, and because the proceedings are televised, everyone can see them sleeping for hours while they claim £600 a day just for being there.

    Best wishes, Pete.

  2. And lose all those years of accumulated wisdom!!??!!

    Seriously, it is s problem. Other than amending the constitution I don’t know of anything that could be done to change it.

  3. While I would not object to some kind of age limits, what I think we really need is term limits. McConnell has been in the senate since 1985, Pelosi has been in the House since 1987, for heaven’s sake! They are completely isolated from the real world. They have no idea what it’s like to try to live outside of an environment where they are completely sheltered from the situations we have to deal with every day. Hell, a lot of these jokers have never even held down a real job, they’ve been in politics since they were in their twenties.

    1. I like term limits, mandatory retirement and ban on joining a lobbying firm for 10 years after they leave Congress. chuq

      1. Ah, I neglected to think of the lobbying problem. You’re absolutely right. A lot of these jokers slip into cushy make-work jobs as lobbyists or “advisors” where they get paid back for favored treatment they gave certain persons/companies or can continue to try to influence the political system to the advantage of their new employers.

      2. Generals are the worse….they go from uniform to high dollar gigs with the M-IC the next day after they retire….that needs to cease. chuq

  4. By all means, replace the responsible and the experienced with the inexperienced and irresponsible. Good idea.

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