Will the Tea Party legacy define 2016? By Robert Romano
It’s been exactly 7 years since Rick Santelli’s Feb.
19, 2009 emotional appeal against foreclosure bailouts on the floor of the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange, arguing on
behalf of homeowners who paid their bills on time and in full who were being
asked to also assume the costs of their neighbors who were delinquent in their
payments and not credit-worthy to begin with.
“This is America! How many of you
people want to pay for your neighbor’s mortgage that has an extra bathroom and
can’t pay their bills? Raise their hand,” said Santelli to a chorus of boos.
“President Obama, are you
listening?” Santelli added. “We’re think of having a Chicago tea
party in July, all you capitalists want to show up to Lake Michigan, I’m going
to start organizing… I think we’re going to be dumping in some derivative
securities, what do you think about that?”
Within weeks, tea parties with tens
of thousands of protestors were popping up all over the country, culminating in
a
Tax Day Tea Party on April 15, 2009.
By
2010, the grassroots movement had helped Republicans reclaim the House of
Representatives on an agenda to stop the Obama administration.
But fast forward seven years, and
legislative accomplishments by the movement appear few to come by.
In 2011, Republicans had promised to
cut spending by $100 billion. Instead, outlays
increased by $100 billion that year.
They could have attempted rescissions that year to keep the election year
promise.
Instead we got sequestration, which
arose out of the debt ceiling battle in 2011, an achievement by then House
Speaker John Boehner. When a debt “super-committee” faiIed to produce a plan
for reducing deficits by $1.2 trillion through 2021, the
automatic enforcement procedures went into effect, which reduced the budget baseline by about $275 billion
from 2014 through 2016.
But it began to be undone, starting
with the Ryan-Murray budget deal of 2013 that came about at the end of the 2013
government shutdown.
In 2014, the original spending cap
was ultimately expanded by
$38.8 billion. In 2015, by
$19.6 billion. In 2016, by
$50.8 billion. Already, $105 billion of the $275
billion of planned cuts had been cancelled, according to numbers compiled by
the Congressional Budget Office.
And in 2017 another $30 billion of
$90 billion of planned automatic cuts have been cancelled — so far. That totals sequester being reduced
by a third, or $135 billion — and counting — by these bad budget deals. To be
fair, the other two-thirds of cuts are still in place.
As for the debt limit, that has been
suspended until after Obama leaves office, allowing borrowing through March
2017.
In 2013, House Republicans supplied
the funding to implement Obamacare despite a valiant effort to defund it led by
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas).
In 2015, Congress funded Obama’s
executive amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants with U.S.-born children
despite having majorities in both chambers of Congress. Same with Planned Parenthood.
Nothing was done to unwind mortgage
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that had so much to do with causing the
financial crisis.
Nor was a Dodd-Frank repeal ever
laid on Obama’s desk despite Republicans having both houses of Congress since
the beginning of 2015.
The Export-Import Bank was
reauthorized.
Congress granted Obama fast track
trade authority to negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
And then, the icing on the cake was the
$1.2 trillion, bloated omnibus spending bill
that was just enacted at the end of 2015.
Meet the new boss, same as the old
boss.
By 2016, it’s fair to say that the
tea party has given up on much hope that this Congress will do anything else to
rein in President Barack Obama during his final year in office. They have
turned their attention to the Republican presidential race, and put their
support behind candidates like Ted Cruz and Donald Trump who bucked the
establishment and have won the Iowa Caucus and New Hampshire Primary,
respectively.
Other candidates, like one-time tea
party favorite Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), have failed to gain traction, still
mired by his Gang of 8 embrace of illegal immigration amnesty-like policies.
But even with the attention on the
nominating process, one can be certain that disaffected GOP voters will still
be watching closely on how the Republican Congress handles issues like the
Puerto Rico bailout, Obama’s imminent Supreme Court nomination, the mass
criminal release bill and the budget.
It’s all a far cry from Santelli’s
famous rant of 2009. And yet the spirit of the tea party lives on. One thing is
for certain, whoever goes on to win the nomination of either party and
ultimately the White House will be held by the same standard — if their
election year promises turn out to just be more hot air.
Robert Romano is the senior editor
of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2016/02/will-tea-party-legacy-define-2016/
Comments
Comments
We Tea
Partiers are more optimistic for the 2016 Presidential election with Trump and
Cruz in the lead. It took two bad
campaigns to get Republicans to rebel against the RNC and total financial
irresponsibility in Congress to get enough of the grassroots to come out of
their coma.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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