Why It's Time for the Tea Party
The populist movement is
more a critique of the GOP than a wing of it
This fact marks our political age: The pendulum is swinging faster and in shorter arcs than it ever has in our lifetimes. Few foresaw the earthquake of 2008 in 2006. No board-certified political professional predicted, on Election Day 2008, what happened in 2009-10 (New Jersey, Virginia and Massachusetts) and has been happening, and will happen, since then. It all moves so quickly now, it all turns on a dime.
But at this moment we are witnessing a shift that will likely have some enduring political impact. Another way of saying that: The past few years, a lot of people in politics have wondered about the possibility of a third party. Would it be possible to organize one? While they were wondering, a virtual third party was being born. And nobody organized it.
Here is Jonathan Rauch in National Journal on the Tea Party's innovative, broad-based network: "In the expansive dominion of the Tea Party Patriots, which extends to thousands of local groups and literally countless activists," there is no chain of command, no hierarchy. Individuals "move the movement." Popular issues gain traction and are emphasized, unpopular ones die. "In American politics, radical decentralization has never been tried on such a large scale." Here are pollsters Scott Rasmussen and Doug Schoen in the Washington Examiner: "The Tea Party has become one of the most powerful and extraordinary movements in American political history." "It is as popular as both the Democratic and Republican parties." "Over half of the electorate now say they favor the Tea Party movement, around 35 percent say they support the movement, 20 to 25 percent self-identify as members of the movement."
So far, the Tea Party is not a wing of the GOP but a critique of it. This was demonstrated in spectacular fashion when GOP operatives dismissed Tea Party-backed Christine O'Donnell in Delaware. The Republican establishment is "the reason we even have the Tea Party movement," shot back columnist and Tea Party enthusiast Andrea Tantaros in the New York Daily News. It was the Bush administration that "ran up deficits" and gave us "open borders" and "Medicare Part D and busted budgets."
(More...)
10 comments:
The money quote, sorta: "They should be fed up. Our institutions have failed."
Institutions are staffed and run by individuals. Individuals have failed us.
We think about replacing or tearing down our failed institutions but it is the people that need replacing, via a length of stout rope if necessary.
That's a great article. My only concern is that people will get caught up in the old rut of believing what Washington politicians are painting themselves as today, instead of remembering their voting records!
And may I now welcome Nickie Goomba
to the group of those who are against this bunch of verminous scum. You have joined the list of the conspirators of hate.
http://progressiveerupts.blogspot.com/
Welcome to the club..
:-)
And all this would have been so much more difficult, maybe even impossible, without Al GoRe's innerwebtubes.
the uprising of citizens is our only hope! Blessed weekend my friend!!:)
We need to use the CONSTITUTION as the litmus test for whether we should or should not in this transformative period. If the federal government doesn't have explicit authority to do this or that, it needs to devolve to the States themselves.
That was a great article! I believe that the Tea Party movement is promoting basically the same types of principles that citizens stood for when Ronald Reagan was elected.
Yes, a good column but look how she ends ... to succeed you must in the end appeal to the center? This is not what Reagan did. He was conservative and he moved the playing field right by being who he was.
Don't plan on Noonan leading or speaking at any Tea Party rallies.
I really have to reread my comments more thorougly.
I am sure that as more and more see that the tea party is for the USA and the constitution and against rank party politics( I do mean stinky) that will only bode well for the USA.
Post a Comment