My comment was directed at how to end tumultuous presidencies in general. But perhaps it was too subtle.
What if it did not matter, who was President?
What if all the President did was deal with foreign policy and enforce federal laws which restricted themselves to laws related to interstate trade, foreign policy and civil rights?
And what if only Congress could pass laws and only laws that related to the powers granted to the federal government by the Constitution without stretching the envelope.
What if all the real action that impacted our daily lives could only get enacted at the state level? And so, states had to enact policies that citizens wanted, or they could move elsewhere.
By concentrating so much power in Washington and especially in the Office of the President and his administrative agencies, we have laid the groundwork for tumultuous administrations especially by anyone who challenges that power structure.
If Trump wins next week expect the Democrats to throw everything, they can think of at him just like they did during his first term and just like they did to try to keep him from running for office.
Ideally, Trump will dismantle as much of the centralized power of Washington as can be done returning many decisions back to the states and reducing the need for bloated federal agencies with nothing to do but create new laws and regulation to micromanage the lives of Americans. Maybe Congress will be scared enough to cancel the special powers granted to the President after 9/11 and we can get back to country where the government reflects the sentiment of the people, not just half the people.