Why Are Members Of Congress Using “Emeritus” And “Emerita”? To Prolong Their Relevancy.  Titles Are Crack And Fentanyl Of Politics- Addictive. One Two-Year Term And Honorific For Life?  

Why Are Members Of The United States Congress Using “Emeritus” And “Emerita”? To Prolong Their Relevancy 

Titles Are The Crack And Fentanyl Of Politics- Addictive  

Serve One Two-Year Term Or One Six-Year Term And Retain An Honorific For Life? 

Emeritus is used for “a male retired individual or for any gender in a gender-neutral context.  Emerita is used for “a female retired individual.”  Both “are honorary titles for retired faculty members, often professors, who have retired in good standing and are allowed to retain their title.” 

The United States Congress has two chambers: The House of Representatives has two-year terms.  The Senate has six-year terms. 

Members of the United States Congress are increasingly using the term emerita and emeritus to refer to themselves.  And their respective staff encourage the practice.  A few reported examples: 

  • “Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Speaker Emerita” who remains a member of the United States House of Representatives. 

  • “Michael McCaul (R-Texas)- Chairman Emeritus House Foreign Affairs Committee” who remains a member of the United States House of Representatives. 

  • “Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R- Florida), Chairman Emeritus House Foreign Affairs Committee” who departed the United States House of Representatives in 2019. 

Once their service concludes, members of the United States Congress remain incapable of leaving.  They already embrace, and media placates them, use of the term “congressman”, “congresswoman” and “senator” while they are alive.  They want to retain the title to maintain relevancy and juice-up earning potential.  Offices for formers answer a telephone call with “senator” fill-in-the-name “office” even when the individual is out of office for decades.  On cable and network programs, individuals out of office for decades are introduced as “congressman”, “congresswoman” and “senator” so the audience believes what they say should be listened to by the audience. 

From Google Searches (AI Overview) 

1) There are no current or former Members of the U.S. Congress who hold emeritus or emerita status. The terms "emeritus" and "emerita" are honorary titles typically reserved for retired professors or other academic/religious figures, not for members of the U.S. Congress. The number of members of Congress refers to the voting and non-voting members currently serving.  Key points:  No official "emeritus" designation: There is no established formal role or honorary title of "emeritus" or "emerita" for past members of Congress.  Active vs. former members: The focus is on the 535 voting members (100 senators, 435 representatives) and the six non-voting delegates who are currently serving in Congress.  Distinction from other professions: The term "emeritus/emerita" is commonly used for retired university professors, clergymen, and other officials in non-political fields.  

2) How many members of congress use emerita or emeritus?  No members of the U.S. Congress are designated as "emerita" or "emeritus".  This honorary title is not used for retiring members of the House or Senate in the same way it is for academics or other professionals.  Here is how the system for granting honorary titles works in the U.S. Congress:  No formal "emeritus" status for members. Unlike universities or other organizations that bestow the "emeritus" title for distinguished service, the U.S. Congress does not have a formal process to grant this to its retiring members. Specific honorary titles. The House of Representatives and the Senate can create specific honorary titles by resolution. This was done for former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who was designated "Speaker Emerita" by a House panel vote in 2022. This title is specific to her former role and is not a general designation for members. Titles for staff and officials. Honorary "emeritus" titles have been designated for non-member officials. For example, the Senate designated a retiring official as "Chief Counsel for Employment Emeritus" by resolution in 2014.  "President pro tempore emeritus." The Senate has occasionally created the honorary title of "president pro tempore emeritus" for a senator of the minority party who previously served as president pro tempore. This title comes with certain privileges, such as an increase in staff, but the accompanying budget was removed in 2014.  Ultimately, the number of current or former U.S. members of Congress with an official emeritus designation is extremely small and limited to a handful of specific, honorific resolutions. The vast majority of former members do not carry this title. 

Emerita Emeritus is commonly referred to as Sand Crab, Mole Crab. Difficulty in the aquarium: Not suitable for aquarium keeping. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.”

LINK TO COMPLETE ANALYSIS IN PDF FORMAT

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