What happened to the tea party? By Rick Manning
Since CNBC’s Rick
Santelli’s fateful on air speech on February
19, 2009, the words “tea party”
have invoked hate and vitriol from the left, fear from the GOP establishment
and near reverence from the right, yet they are virtually unspoken in this
election season.
Like every grassroots
uprising on the right, the tea party was never a top-down organized entity, but
instead a bubbling up of individuals who were concerned enough about the fate
of their country that they gave up their time to show up at rallies, form small
local groups and set up blogs to urge change.
And it was change they
got. In 2010, the GOP threw Nancy Pelosi out of the Speaker’s chair and
replaced her with John Boehner who was known for fiery limited
government speeches on the
House floor. After the 2012 re-election of Obama over a candidate who
signed the state health care law that much of Obamacare was modeled after, Mitt
Romney, those who identified with the tea party label gave Republicans their
long sought after control of the Senate in 2014.
But a combination of
budget compromises that funded Obama’s priorities while not rolling back the
President’s dramatic expansion in government spending, the push for amnesty led
by former tea party favorite Florida Senator Marco Rubio in the Senate, and the
collapse of trust in GOP House leadership which brought down Boehner’s
speakership, changed the movement.
Many of the people who
made up the tea party were transformed from idealistic Tri-cornered hat wearing
patriots who believed campaign rhetoric that mirrored their beliefs to a much
more savvy and in some ways more cynical electorate.
After being victimized
by Obama’s IRS abuses, and ignored by those they helped elect, many local tea
party leaders are now challenging the very politicians who they pushed into
office in 2010.
Becky Gerritson of
Wetumpka, Alabama is one example of this new, confident leader. After her small
group was targeted by Obama’s IRS, Gerritson came to the fore testifying before
the House Ways and Means Committee about the abuse before Congress with words
that encapsulated what drove this ground up movement. (See her testimony
here.)
Gerritson’s outrage at
the abuse was made clear to everyone listening as she spoke to the heart of the
tea party movement saying, “[we] had no party affiliation … It didn’t matter …
the only notion expressed was that our representative government had failed
us.”
“In Wetumpka, we are
patriotic Americans; we peacefully assemble; we petition our government; we
exercise our right to free speech. We don’t understand why the government tried
to stop us. I’m not here as a serf or a vassal. I’m not begging my lord for
mercy. I’m a born-free American woman, wife, mother, and citizen, and I’m telling
my government that you’ve forgotten your place.”
Summing up her
testimony, Gerritson finished with a sentiment that resonates throughout those
who were scorned by many on both sides of the political aisle declaring, “I’m
not interested in scoring political points. I want to preserve and protect the
America that I grew up in. The America that people crossed oceans and risked
their lives to become a part of, and I’m terrified it’s slipping away. Thank
you very much.”
Yet in 2016, the words
“tea party” are hardly heard. What changed? Well, for Becky Gerritson,
after five years of watching the Congresswoman she supported in 2010, U.S. Rep.
Martha Roby, play the Washington, D.C. game, she decided that enough was
enough, and is challenging that entrenched politician in the Republican
primary. A long shot bid with almost zero financing, Gerritson doesn’t
seem to care about the odds, as she gives voice to the same idealistic,
patriotic spirit that she brought before the House of Representatives during the
IRS scandal.
Others, disenchanted by
what they perceive as a betrayal by those who they sent to D.C., are making
their collective voices heard as the silent majority supporting the outsider
GOP candidacies of Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Ted Cruz and Carly Fiorina.
The stunning rejection of D.C. approved Republican presidential candidates has
left the party power brokers scrambling for alternatives, while trying to
figure out if they can get their hooks into the Trump bandwagon.
And it is in the
presidential primary, where we find the real answer to the question, what
happened to the tea party?
It returned to its
roots. Not an organized political machine, but a movement of people who
believe that America can and needs to do better. Americans who believe
that those who they once trusted in 2010 have used up their chances and in
looking for an alternative many have turned to a brash New York real estate
mogul who doesn’t fit strict philosophical tests. Tests that were made
moot by those who mouthed the right words before Election Day only to forget
them once sworn into office.
They are turning to Ted
Cruz, the eloquent outsider who hasn’t forgotten his campaign promises from
2012, and has stirred up hornets’ nest after hornets’ nest in the Senate due to
his unwillingness to play the game.
But most importantly,
they are now the majority of the Republican primary voters whose primal scream
against the dangers of more and more government intrusion into their lives, and
the dead certain knowledge that more government spending and debt erodes rather
than expands the American dream has already been heard in Iowa and New
Hampshire with it likely to become a full blown roar in South Carolina on Feb.
20 and the southern primaries on March 1.
The reason you don’t
hear the words “tea party” anymore is because it is no longer a relevant term,
the tea party is now the heart and soul of the Republican Party, much to the
shock and chagrin of the comfortable GOP Congressional majority which is no
longer believed by its base constituency.
Candidates like Becky
Gerritson may not win their primaries due to lack of finances, but the
ascension of Trump and Cruz to the top of the Republican candidate presidential
heap proves that her voice is still resonating.
And that is how a movement
takes over a political party defeating those who sought to manipulate them at
election time while telling them to sit down and shut up for the other
twenty-three months. And that is the story of
the tea party seven years after Rick Santelli’s roar.
The author is president
of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2016/02/what-happened-to-the-tea-party/
Comments
Comments
Most of
us Tea Partiers are backing Trump, because he brought up our most serious
issues with immigration, bad trade deals, Muslim invasion, etc. Tea Partiers
know that 80% of the Republicans in Congress are actually Democrats who ran as
Republicans. That’s the establishment.
The next
largest group of Tea Partiers are backing Cruz. Us Trump backers want him to
clean house. The Cruz backers either like his 96% Score on Conservative Review
or have bought the Democrat bull-shit lies about Trump. Tea Partiers always liked Rand Paul and Ron
Paul, but we saw how they were marginalized by the media and GOP
‘establishment’.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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