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A Line Drawn in the Constitution

Some changes arrive with thunder. Others come like careful handwriting—measured, deliberate, meant to last longer than the people who write it.

On February 27, 1951, the United States completed ratification of the Twenty-second Amendment, setting a two-term limit for presidential elections. It was a response shaped by memory: the long stretch of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s four elections, and the question of how to keep power rotating without relying on custom alone.

In the quiet machinery of law, this was a new latch on an old door—an attempt to balance stability with renewal. A small clause, and a large idea: that even the highest office should have an ending built into it.

Thanks for reading,

The TTC Team

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