The
frustrated fringe elements of the Republican and Independent voter
electorate gathered in Nashville, Tennessee this past weekend to
vent about the first year of the Obama administration. They
named the convention the �Tea Party,� a spin on the Boston Tea Party
of 1767, where the British American colonists rioted over the stamp
tax put on them without their having had a say about it (Taxation
without representation). They rioted by throwing tea in the Boston
harbor, and raised tensions with the monarchy that ultimately lead
to a revolution that gave birth to a new nation.
The
Nashville �Tea Partiers� are protesting �Obamacare� and what they
call the �overspending of the federal government.� Most of these
�partiers� are conservative elements of the Republican Party that
are so far to the right, they are out of the political mainstream.
Christian fundamentalists, anti-immigration activists (the �Minutemen�),
anti-abortion extremists, anti-terrorism �protectionists� and of
course the demoralized conservative base of anti-tax, anti-spend
of politically ambitious Republican electeds all came together to
protest, really - just for the sake of protest. The Tea Party lays
claim to the post Obama election victories in New Jersey, Virginia
and most recently in Massachusetts, declaring that these victories
are reflective of public dissatisfaction.
The
inference is that they are a groundswell that will only grow, leading
into the mid-term Congressional elections. The reality is that it
is more a play in obstructionist politics. The Tea Party is no more
than an attention grab. It is like a person who draws attention
to themselves at the neighborhood block party by hoo-rawing. All
the Tea Partiers said to the nation was, �Party over here!� There
was nothing else of substance to speak of. No new ideas, just a
recast of old ones and an effort to stay relevant in the public
discussion.
The
question really is, �What kind of party is it?� One to advance the
discussion on how we become a better nation? Or one that just makes
noise so the party they truly represent doesn�t become irrelevant?
The
tea partiers come from a demoralized party trying re-craft a message.
It�s an old message of an anti-taxation, anti-spending, anti-abortion,
anti-gay platform. They are still the baseline constituency of the
Party of �NO.� And they are still the best friends of big business
and the military industrial complex, currently the biggest draws
on the American taxpayer.
Saving
industry and maintaining two wars have the American people hamstrung.
The Republicans are largely responsible for the growth of the government�s
deficit. And they play stupid (well, some of them really are stupid
- more on this in a minute) and hit the mute button when this point
is brought to them. Yet the Tea Party wants to critique President
Obama�s spending plan, his stimulus plan, his recovery plan, all
of which are working. The fundamental principle of business is that
you have to spend money to make money. The government had to spend
money to save Wall Street, to save the banking / mortgage industries,
to save the jobs market and now to save Main Street. The point is
that President Obama is doing something different than just expanding
the size of government. He�s trying to keep the economy from collapsing.
Don�t
bother Republicans with details. Details get in the way of their
rhetoric. The Republicans lost the White House and Congress because
they had no solutions. Now, all of a sudden, they have ALL the ideas.
Yeah, after they�ve been shown to them and they still can�t remember
most of them. It�s really insulting, but a populous movement of
�know-nothings,� a repeat of a 19th Century populous movement that
was skeptical of the educated, still poised to try to take government
- after the anti-intellectualism of the Bush II administration nearly
ruined the country. It�s scary, only because of the mass- and new
media involved. Popular tyranny of a dumbed-down nation has the
capacity to spread quickly. The Tea Partiers are simply trying to
light the fuse.
Then
you have the most irrelevant rhetoritician in politics today, Sarah
Palin, keynoting the event. Palin�s an ideologue of a different
kind, one appealing to the eye and to �dumbed down� sensibilities.
Sarah Palin is a bigger distraction than the Tea Party itself. The
only reason people even paid attention to the Tea Party was because
of the platform they gave Palin as if she�s now the �out of government�
spokesperson for The Conservative Disenfranchised. She�s the ultimate
mass distraction, more ignorant than George W. Bush, with all the
answers written in the palm of her hand. At least George W. used
paper notes.
Her
grand entrance was the face time Republican obstructionists needed
after President Obama faced down the Republican obstructionists
at their recent retreat. They need more ways to call attention to
themselves while in the midst of the populous change movement that
elected Obama. Grand standing is what Republicans do. Now they want
to act like their government has been taken away from them, a new
spin on an old trick. It�s a lesson we should note and file for
reference. They want to liken this party�s efforts to the Ross Perot
Party that brought about government spending reforms. Only difference
was Perot knew what he was talking about. You still don�t know what
the Tea Party�s message is, and if they know what they say they
know.
Party
goers tend to make grand entrances anyway. But every now and then,
one gets lost in the crowd because either nobody notices that they�re
there, or they�re irrelevant to the party mix. That�s what we witnessed
in Nashville this weekend. A grand entrance that was nothing more
than just �a party over there.�
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing director
of the
Urban Issues Forum
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is
AnthonySamad.com. Click here
to contact Dr. Samad. |