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The Uses and Abuses of the Tea Party
Weekly Standard ^ | August 10, 2011 | Jay Cost

Posted on 08/10/2011 12:05:25 PM PDT by neverdem

The following facts about the federal budget deficit are, as far as I know, widely accepted:

First. We have a long-term deficit problem that is due to the rising costs of federal entitlements, above all Medicare.

Second. Our current deficit is substantially larger than normal, due to several factors:

- The economic recession, which decreased the amount of tax revenue the federal government collects;

- An increase in government spending, in the form of automatic stabilizers, to mitigate the human toll of the recession;

- An increase in government spending, in the form of Keynesian stimulus, to restart the engine of economic growth;

- The continued weakness of the economy, which has kept tax revenues down and the cost of automatic stabilizers up.

Nowhere on this list do I see anything regarding the Tea Party. So why is this movement now so frequently mentioned as a prime factor in the country's deficit woes?

To answer this question, we must understand that Democrats are in desperate need of a red herring. If Obama goes down next year, a whole slew of congressional Democrats will go down with him – especially in the Senate, where the Democrats must defend 22 seats, 9 of which are from states that George W. Bush won in 2004.

As a political issue, the Democrats own the deficit, if for no other reason than the party has occupied the White House during its runaway growth. As dangerous as this is as an issue, it is secondary to our terrible, no good, rotten economic recovery, which the Democrats also own.

It was the Democrats who designed the stimulus in early 2009, promising that its enactment would keep the unemployment rate under 8 percent. It was the Democrats who then turned their attention to the various items on the liberal checklist – cap and trade, student loan federalization, and of course health care – even as the unemployment rate passed 10 percent. It was the Democrats who endeavored to implement whole volumes of new federal regulations, which have scared the living daylights out of businesses.

The recession may be the political fault of George W. Bush, but the Democrats must take the blame for the disappointing recovery, for it was they who had total control of the federal government in 2009 and 2010.

And the Democrats are set to pay for it – big time. Goldman Sachs recently revised its 2012 economic forecast; it now sees growth ranging between 2 percent and 2.5 percent next year, and unemployment edging up to 9.25 percent. If this forecast turns out to be accurate, then Barack Obama will lose next year by a large margin, and scores of congressional Democrats will follow him down to defeat. 

So, party leaders are in a full-blown panic, and rightly so. They are desperate to turn the public's gaze away from their own shortcomings, and no doubt some too-clever-by-half pollster or focus group hack suggested blaming the Tea Party.

Sure, why not!

The interesting thing about the Tea Party is that it does not have a lot in common with any kind of party. A "party" – in the political sense – implies organization, membership, internal rules and practices to govern the behavior of its members, and so on. Even the social sense of the word implies some kind of structure; after all, you can't go to Johnson's party down the street while simultaneously playing X-Box in your basement.

While there are Tea Party meet-ups, marches on Washington, and even groups claiming to speak for the Tea Party as a whole (including a congressional caucus), it is nevertheless hard to think of the Tea Party as a literal party. After all, the actual number of people affiliated with any of these activities is a pittance compared to the 25 percent or so of American adults who consider themselves "Tea Partiers." We're talking about roughly 58 million people nationwide, more than the number who voted for Ronald Reagan in 1984.

Being a Tea Partier for 95 percent or more of these people suggests not a political or even social group affiliation, but a state of mind, one that evokes the sentiments of the original Boston Tea Party: that the government does not reflect the will of the people, and that it is burdening them to take care of a privileged minority. For the original Boston Tea Partiers, the great government transgression was taxation; for today's Tea Partiers, it is a mountain of debt that will have to be paid eventually.

The ambiguity of 95 percent of the Tea Party is what makes it an attractive target for the Democratic party and its friends in the mainstream media. There is no leader of the Tea Party. No building where the Tea Party meets. No set of rules and regulations that enumerates the privileges and responsibilities of its members. Thus, the "Tea Party" can be whatever the Democrats need it to be.

Were they a bunch of terrorists? Sure! Were they intransigent? Absolutely! As long as "they" stay relatively obscure, Democrats can ascribe almost any quality they want to them. On the other hand, if they start naming names, they're only going to prompt a retort from the accused, who will surely respond with talk of "Cut, Cap, and Balance," which polls extremely well. So, how does that advance their interests?

As a great example of this, check out this clip from ABC's This Week. At about the 1:30 mark, Christiane Amanpour says that Steve Rattner called Congressman Jason Chaffetz of Utah an "economic terrorist," to which Rattner hurriedly responds "not the congressman personally..." Of course not! The charge is rhetorically useful only if its object is a vague, unidentifiable group that cannot respond with righteous indignation.

This is similar to Richard Nixon's "silent majority," one of the most ingenious rhetorical devices in modern political history. Once Nixon defined this group, he could put whatever words in their mouths he wanted. After all, it's not like he identified Frank Thompson from down the street as part of the "silent majority," so it really didn't matter if Frank disagreed with Nixon or not.

However, there is a problem for Democrats with turning the Tea Party into the bogeyman. Steven Spielberg's Jaws is a fantastic movie because you do not see see the shark until you're already well into the film, but eventually you see it. If you never did, the movie would have been forgotten long ago.

The Democrats are never going to be able to produce this terrible, villainous Tea Party for the world to behold. It will forever remain in the shadows, secretly making sure that nothing goes Obama's way between now and Election Day. This makes for a very bad foil. There's really no third act, no moment when Obama and the forces of light finally confront the Tea Party and its minions of darkness. Worse for the president, he does not get to square off against "the Tea Party" on the ballot. Instead, he will probably face Rick Perry or Mitt Romney, both of whom are living, breathing politicians with actual records, and no history of terrorism.

So yes, the Tea Party has become a red herring for the Democratic party and the liberals who dominate it, meant to distract the public from their own terrible record. Yet, as red herrings go, it is a pretty useless one – and a testimony to just how worried they are about next year.Bookshelf

Book Info: 


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: barackalypsenow; bhoeconomy; bhofascism; democrats; liberalfascism; obamadepression; obamageddon; smearcampaign; teaparty
The rats are defending six open seats from the retirements of Akaka, Baucus, Conrad, Kohl, Lieberman and Webb. We will be defending the seats of Ensign, Kyl and Hutchinson, IIRC.

The recession is the fault of subprime loans that were started under Clinton, and that their buddies at Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Wall Street then bundled into garbage securities!!!

1 posted on 08/10/2011 12:05:27 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Don’t forget the comedy of Dodd and Frank who insisted there was nothing about Freddie or Fannie that needed investigation and review. I’m sure it was just a coincidence that Frank’s “boyfriend” was a Fannie Mae exec who pocketed millions in bonuses due to the books being cooked.


2 posted on 08/10/2011 12:13:33 PM PDT by In Maryland ("The Federal Government is no longer one of limited and enumerated powers." -Justice Clarence Thomas)
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To: neverdem

I would certainly add Big Government to the list. We don’t need a federal Deparment of Education. It should be axed, completely.

We don’t need a National Foundation for the Arts. Almost everything it supports goes to insiders and to academics who produce lousy, expensive art, often bought by government.

We don’t need a biased, lying, useless NPR.

We don’t need an EPA. We probably need some regulation, but that can be done at the state level, where it belongs. Then some competition would be introduced, as businesses moved even faster from the stupid states to the good ones.

And there’s plenty more. A couple of million federal workers need to be laid off. They are doing nothing useful, but burdening the economy.

Government unions, which were once illegal, should be illegal again. Don’t want to work for the government, work somewhere else.

None of that involves entitlements or people who are genuinely hard up or who have earned their retirements.


3 posted on 08/10/2011 12:14:35 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius.)
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To: neverdem

The analogy to the silent majority would seem to be a better fit with Michelle Bachmann. Just as Nixon called on the great silent majority of his fellow Americans for their support, Bachmann could call on the great tea party of her fellow Americans for their support.


4 posted on 08/10/2011 12:22:53 PM PDT by rwa265 (Christ my Cornerstone)
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To: In Maryland; Cicero; rwa265; All

Make that Bingaman, not Baucus. I’m looking at the 1st link.


5 posted on 08/10/2011 12:26:53 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

Yes and no.


6 posted on 08/10/2011 12:32:39 PM PDT by Tzimisce (Never forget that the American Revolution began when the British tried to disarm the colonists.)
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To: Cicero

We need to revamp the tax code and remove the progressive approach that has dogged small business and the middle class for decades.


7 posted on 08/10/2011 12:32:44 PM PDT by montyspython (This thread needs more cowbell)
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To: neverdem

It’s the spending, stupid! And the strangling regulations! And the fascist/socialist tyranny!!


8 posted on 08/10/2011 12:36:18 PM PDT by Jim Robinson (Rebellion is brewing!! Impeach the corrupt Marxist bastard!!)
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To: Cicero
I would certainly add Big Government to the list. We don’t need a federal Deparment of Education. It should be axed, completely.

To me, the biggest joke in D.C. is the Dept. of Energy.

9 posted on 08/10/2011 12:36:25 PM PDT by houeto
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To: neverdem; All

The excesses of Wall Street, bundling poor loans and foisting them off on people throughout the world was the icing on the cake. Paying people for commissions for making bad loans didn’t help either. I understand that now commissions are being spread out over several years, to give the salesmen some skin in the game. If too many loans fail, they loose their job and the future payments on the commissions already assigned.


10 posted on 08/10/2011 12:40:28 PM PDT by gleeaikin
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To: Tzimisce
Yes and no.

Yes and no what?

11 posted on 08/10/2011 12:47:50 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

Terrorists? No.

Reformed addicts is a better description.

Most addicts (drug, alcohol, you name it) know they have a problem, but they keep that info buried in the back of their mind. Then an event comes along that wakes them up to reality—the proverbial “hitting rock bottom.”

For most Tea Partiers the 2008 crash and then witnessing Washington taking the exact wrong steps with TARP and the stimulus was rock bottom. I think the credit downgrade will be another rock bottom moment and produce the next wave of Tea Partiers.

And as anyone can tell you, nobody is more intolerant and inflexible than a reformed addict. Want to get in an argument about smoking? Light up in front of someone that has quit.


12 posted on 08/10/2011 12:58:31 PM PDT by Brookhaven (Herman Cain knows computers, math, missiles, banking, burgers, pizza, gospel music, & Coca-Cola)
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To: neverdem
If ever a liberal should ask, "What happened?"

It was the Democrats who designed the stimulus in early 2009, promising that its enactment would keep the unemployment rate under 8 percent. It was the Democrats who then turned their attention to the various items on the liberal checklist – cap and trade, student loan federalization, and of course health care – even as the unemployment rate passed 10 percent. It was the Democrats who endeavored to implement whole volumes of new federal regulations, which have scared the living daylights out of businesses.

That's what happened.

13 posted on 08/10/2011 1:33:21 PM PDT by Rudder (The Main Stream Media is Our Enemy---get used to it.)
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To: houeto

That, too. And there are others.


14 posted on 08/10/2011 1:53:17 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius.)
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To: neverdem
Yes and no what?

Yes - the Tea Party is a grass roots, leaderless movement.

Yes - Dems can call it anything they want.

No - they never have to present it to anyone.

Liberals love blaming straw men.

What is "social justice" and who is the enemy of "social justice"? You'll never get a direct answer from anyone on the left.
15 posted on 08/10/2011 4:01:27 PM PDT by Tzimisce (Never forget that the American Revolution began when the British tried to disarm the colonists.)
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To: neverdem

If the Tea Party is to blame for the downgrade, the doctor is to blame for your leukemia.


16 posted on 08/11/2011 12:57:31 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (I'll raise $2million for Gov. Sarah Palin. What'll you do?)
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