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Why the Tea Party’s Waning, Not Winning: It strayed from its original focus on economic issues
National Review ^ | 03/05/2014 | Michael Tanner

Posted on 03/05/2014 7:11:33 AM PST by SeekAndFind

As the Tea Party celebrates its five-year anniversary, many commentators are asking whether the grassroots anti–Big Government movement is still relevant.

In some ways, this seems a silly question. The Tea Party has been enormously successful in changing the terms of the national debate on issues such as debt and spending. And, while its favored candidates have suffered some high-profile defeats, it has also won important victories. The Republican midterm sweep of 2010 would not have been possible without its energy and enthusiasm.

Yet it’s also true that the Tea Party’s clout is waning. According to the most recent Gallup poll, just 30 percent of Americans have a favorable opinion of the movement, the lowest level in its history. This seems particularly unsettling when polls also show that the public still overwhelmingly supports the Tea Party objective of limited government. In fact, a recent Gallup poll shows a record 72 percent of Americans feels that big government is the greatest threat to the future of the country. Voters who feel that way should be flocking to the Tea Party in droves.

They are not.

Some of it might be a question of tactics. Americans tend to dislike confrontation from their political leaders. Certainly, things like the government shutdown tended to turn off some voters, especially when misrepresented by a biased media. The overheated rhetoric of some tea-party leaders may also drive away otherwise sympathetic voters. Calling every dissenting Republican a RINO or inferring that President Obama is some sort of crypto-Muslim Communist is not going to win friends or influence people. Some tea-party activists definitely come across as a bit over-caffeinated.

But there is also a more fundamental issue at play here: Is the Tea Party still the Tea Party?

Sparked by outrage over the Wall Street bailouts, the original Tea Party was motivated by an opposition to Big Government. The motto of the Tea Party Patriots, one of the largest and most influential groups, was “fiscal responsibility, limited government, and free markets.” The Tea Party’s core issues were the skyrocketing national debt and opposition to Obamacare.

Social issues were not part of the platform. In fact, Jenny Beth Martin, leader of the Tea Party Patriots told the New York Times, “When people ask about [social issues], we say, ‘Go get involved in other organizations that already deal with social issues very well.’ We have to be diligent and stay on message.”

In an April 2010 CBS News/New York Times poll, barely 14 percent of Tea Party supporters said social issues were more important to them than economic issues.

As a result, the group was able to build a broad coalition of economic conservatives — traditional Republicans, of course, but also libertarians, and fiscally conservative socially tolerant suburbanites who had drifted away from the GOP in recent years. In national surveys, roughly 40 percent of Tea Party supporters once described themselves as libertarian or libertarian-leaning.

These disparate groups might have disagreed about whether Adam and Steve should be able to get married, but they agreed that both Adam and Steve were overtaxed and being spent into bankruptcy by an out-of-control federal government.

But the Tea Party has drifted away from its strict economic-conservative origins. Yes, opposition to Obamacare and government spending remain priorities. But increasingly issues such as abortion, gay marriage, and immigration have become the tail that wags the dog.

Thus you now hear Judson Phillips, the head of Tea Party Nation, a group that once said social issues were “just not something that is on our radar,” denouncing gay marriage as “a freak show, involving 3 men, 5 women, 2 dogs, and a Bengal tiger.” Or Scottie Neil Hughes, of the Tea Party News Network, suggesting that women who have abortions should be jailed. And, during last summer’s congressional town-hall season, Tea Party Patriots was organizing not against Obamacare or raising the debt ceiling, but against immigration reform.

According to the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life, Tea Party members are now farther to the right on social issues than Americans as a whole or even the Republican party. For example, while the public now narrowly approves of gay marriage, Tea Party members disapprove by nearly two to one. The public is largely split on abortion, but 60 percent of tea partiers believe it should be illegal in all or most cases. Tea Party members are roughly 20 percentage points more likely than the general public to oppose a path to citizenship for illegal aliens. A majority of Tea Party supporters now say that their religion is the most important factor in determining their opinions on issues.

As a result, economic conservatives, libertarians, and anti-tax moderates are leaving the movement. Fewer than a quarter of tea partiers now describe themselves as libertarian-leaning. In last fall’s Virginia gubernatorial election, socially moderate suburbanites overwhelmingly backed Democrat Terry McAuliffe over tea-party favorite and arch-social-conservative Ken Cuccinelli.

The tea party has begun to look not like a broad-based coalition of economic conservatives but simply the most conservative wing of the Republican Party. The tent is getting smaller. As Steve Billet, professor of political management at George Washington University, noted, “The polls suggest that where the Tea Party has failed is when they tried to expand their agenda beyond the explicit budgetary issues, and got much more involved in some other social issues.”

It’s not as though the issues that first sparked the Tea Party have gone away: TARP itself may have been largely repaid, but the culture of crony capitalism behind it still thrives. Deficits are in temporary decline, but the national debt continues to grow and the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare continue to mount. Obamacare, if anything, is proving to be an even bigger disaster than anticipated. The need for a strong voice in opposition to Big Government is as great now as it has ever been.

And the Tea Party is far from powerless. It continues to tap into grassroots mistrust of the Washington establishment. Its ability to mount primary challenges will keep Republicans from straying too far from its agenda. But if it hopes to regain the power it once had to reshape the American political landscape, it should remember why it started in the first place.

— Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and author of Leviathan on the Right: How Big-Government Conservatism Brought Down the Republican Revolution.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: irs; irsabuse; teaparty
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To: Atlas Sneezed

That’s because they allowed the Liberals to define what the “Tea Party” is.

Once you let your opponent define you, it’s over.


41 posted on 03/05/2014 8:54:52 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: SeekAndFind
...five-year anniversary...

This kind of illiteracy--at NATIONAL REVIEW!

42 posted on 03/05/2014 8:59:32 AM PST by Arthur McGowan
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To: onyx; Rusty0604

According to the media...

Tea Party didn’t exist

Tea Party was just astroturf

Tea Party is racist

Tea Party is dying

We had some very large rallies that didn’t even extist according to the media.

We had elections won that didn’t happen according to the media.

Blah, blah, blah. The Tea Party is alive and doing well with people in office now fighting for the things that we as Americans believe in all levels of government.

The Tea Party helps to form national debate as well as local, statewide and national policies and laws.


43 posted on 03/05/2014 9:03:24 AM PST by RedMDer (May we always be happy and may our enemies always know it. - Sarah Palin, 10-18-2010)
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To: Paine in the Neck

you did not talk to me


44 posted on 03/05/2014 9:04:33 AM PST by aumrl (let's keep it real Conservatives)
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To: RedMDer
B T T T ! ! ! ©

45 posted on 03/05/2014 9:07:52 AM PST by onyx (Please Support Free Republic - Donate Monthly! If you want on Sarah Palin's Ping List, Let Me know!)
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To: SeekAndFind

The republican insider meme has gone out to the media.

Cornyn “crushes”

Tea party “flounders”

Tea party “wanes”

etc. etc.


46 posted on 03/05/2014 9:08:30 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: All

this is the RINO BS of trying to split conservative into social and fiscal. Conservative is conservative there is no division.

This is about protecting the RINO staffers who are DC homosexuals.


47 posted on 03/05/2014 9:13:25 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: babble-on

If the government has unlimited social objectives it’s a little difficult to focus on just the spending. It’s treating the symptom not the disease. Oh, and liberals have the ball, so it’s their agenda that we are paying for.


48 posted on 03/05/2014 9:21:36 AM PST by Tallguy
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To: babble-on

I agree with you and the article. Most people can get behind the original, economic message of the TEA Party, but not when the social issues get attached. I have watched people who used to admire the TEA Party but now they are against it simply because of the abortion and gay issues. Now fiscal conservatives have lost an opportunity to take back some control from the liberals, and social conservatives gained nothing while weakening the influence of the TEA Party. Dumb, dumb, dumb.


49 posted on 03/05/2014 9:24:42 AM PST by LuvFreeRepublic
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To: babble-on; Sybeck1
No, it’s a race issue.

Como?

50 posted on 03/05/2014 9:27:16 AM PST by Chuckster (The longer I live the less I care about what you think.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Lots of tea party candidates won down ticket races. Just because Cornyn won, with his ~12 million dollar budget ** doesn’t mean the tea party didn’t do a great job in the lower rung races. The tea party did not have a strong candidate, he didn’t start early enough and seemed pretty disinterested. That’s no way to win a campaign.

As many on FR have said, this is a long haul, grass roots effort to clean out RINOs from the bottom up.

Now whether our country will last long enough to accomplish this is another question entirely, but it doesn’t mean we should give up.

** http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/summary.php?cid=N00024852


51 posted on 03/05/2014 9:28:45 AM PST by boxlunch (Psalm 2)
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To: SeekAndFind

52 posted on 03/05/2014 9:44:37 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: joe fonebone

If you want to find socialist voters, then look to the social liberals.


53 posted on 03/05/2014 10:48:52 AM PST by ansel12 (Ben Bradlee -- JFK told me that "he was all for people's solving their problems by abortion".)
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To: babble-on; Sybeck1

Immigration is economic.

When you lose a state to democrat voters, such as California, it is a loss to the left, to socialism and big government, anti-Christianity, and the more democrat voters, the farther left we move.

Unemployment, taxes, welfare, and on and on, without immigration the democrat party as it is today, would have died years ago.


54 posted on 03/05/2014 10:53:26 AM PST by ansel12 (Ben Bradlee -- JFK told me that "he was all for people's solving their problems by abortion".)
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To: All

this article appears like clockwork every six months and after every single election.

This has all the charm of “1984”. Your 20gram ration of chocholate is now increased to 20grams.


55 posted on 03/05/2014 10:55:49 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: grania

Do Tea Party voters have to be monolithic? Can’t different Tea Party voters support different causes depending on their interests, or more than one cause at the same time?


56 posted on 03/05/2014 10:57:21 AM PST by Socon-Econ
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To: SeekAndFind

In 2010, the tea party was made up of social conservatives, more religious than the GOP, and with about half of them identifying as the “religious right”.

This article is bogus.

Survey | Religion and the Tea Party in the 2010 Elections
September 2010:
Nearly half (47%) also say they are part of the religious right or conservative Christian movement. Among the more than 8-in-10 (81%) who identify as Christian within the Tea Party movement, 57% also consider themselves part of the Christian conservative movement.

They are mostly social conservatives, not libertarians on social issues. Nearly two-thirds (63%) say abortion should be illegal in all or most cases, and less than 1-in-5 (18%) support allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry.


57 posted on 03/05/2014 10:57:54 AM PST by ansel12 (Ben Bradlee -- JFK told me that "he was all for people's solving their problems by abortion".)
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To: Socon-Econ
To those who want to end the invasion of the US, not embracing that view is unacceptable.

If we don't stop it, we're through. What's going to happen when the Mexicans in the US protest and turn violent? Are the feds going to let it happen in the name of "peaceful protestors"? Because that's the standard the US has set under Obama for the rest of the world.

We got played and it still sings. Elitists screaming "tea party" got all conservatives to rally to stop tax rates on upper-wage earners from being increased. A fine goal, for sure.

But what happened after they got that? Why they side with their Chamber of Commrerce buddies and still work to enable the invasion, for their cheap labor lust.

58 posted on 03/05/2014 11:06:13 AM PST by grania
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To: SeekAndFind
Social issues were not part of the platform. In fact, Jenny Beth Martin, leader of the Tea Party Patriots told the New York Times, “When people ask about [social issues], we say, ‘Go get involved in other organizations that already deal with social issues very well.’ We have to be diligent and stay on message.”

Easy to understand when they post the answer to the problem. Libertarianism is ≠ to Conservatism, in fact it is easy to understand why Goldwater lost so badly.

59 posted on 03/05/2014 11:43:36 AM PST by itsahoot (Voting for RINOs is the same as voting for any other Tyrant.)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
If it were just about economic issues, then the Tea Party would not be all that different from Occupy Wall Street.



Absolutely.

60 posted on 03/05/2014 11:46:55 AM PST by itsahoot (Voting for RINOs is the same as voting for any other Tyrant.)
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