The Tea Party and the Midterms
Thursday 04 November 2010
by: Joe Conason, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
The urge to punish politicians is understandable no matter who is in power, because they inevitably disappoint the fond hopes of their admirers and raise the hackles of their detractors -- and yet that same urge is almost never satisfied for long. In the case of the midterm spanking administered to Democrats, the likelihood that voters will get what they claim to want as a result are even smaller than usual.
The fleeting thrill of ousting a particular elected official (or even dozens of them) ultimately will not bring much comfort to anyone inspired by more than mere partisan fury.
The tea party movement and its followers claim that they were originally motivated by the failure of Republicans and Democrats alike to balance the budget, improve the economy, and reduce taxes and government waste. But their energies were diverted toward the restoration of Republican power. And the goals of the Republican leadership are entirely oriented toward a partisan victory in 2012, as they have declared more than once during the election season.
What that means in practice is no progress on the budget, the economy, taxation or the size and scope of government. As nostrums go, the tea party's evident enthusiasm for throwing teachers, police officers, firefighters and other public employees out of work makes very little sense in a depressed economy.
Similarly, the insistence of some voters (and the politicians who pander to them) that taxes must be cut while restoring fiscal balance is mathematically impossible -- unless we are prepared to contemplate massive cuts in Medicare, defense spending, homeland security, environmental protection, infrastructure maintenance and a host of other essential functions. What would the angry voters say about national security when a spending reduction of 25 percent encourages a new round of terrorist attacks?
Most likely, they would complain furiously, never noticing the consequences of their own behavior.
Polls show again and again this year that many voters know little or nothing about the actual content of the health care reform, banking reform and stimulus legislation that have aroused so much opposition. Most voters have no idea that the hated "bailouts" -- whose passage was among the few truly bipartisan initiatives in recent years -- were not only successful but almost free of cost to the taxpayers. And most seem unable to conceive of the disaster we would be facing now, as a nation, if Barack Obama and George W. Bush had let the financial and insurance sectors collapse along with the auto industry.
Whatever rearrangement of power on Capitol Hill results from the midterm, the surest outcome is that there will be no change in the trends that supposedly irritate the tea party. Even if the Republicans fulfill all the promises they have recklessly offered to their own right wing, those trends are likely to continue and even worsen. There will be no significant reduction in the deficit or the debt. There will be no substantial reform of the tax system. And there will be no safeguard against future bailouts and corporate abuse -- especially if the Republicans fulfill their promises.
Even if the Republicans could somehow force through their dream budgets, the outcome would only be more of the same: enormous tax breaks for the very highest earners, likely tax increases for everyone else at either the federal or local levels or both, and higher deficits for decades into the future as revenues fall. And if they somehow repeal the banking reform legislation that passed this year, that may well ensure the repetition of the same bailouts that inspired the rise of the tea party.
The voters have told us that they're mad as hell and won't take it anymore. But their madness has ironically guaranteed that they will get more of exactly what they profess to despise.
Joe Conason writes for the New York Observer (www.observer.com).
Copyright 2010 Creators.com
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Comments
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You act like that the
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 15:34 — Anonymous (not verified)You act like that the country is somehow going to take a radical change from the first half of Obama's term. Nothing's going to change. After all, the Democrats kept prolonging the wars when they won the majority in 2006 and corporate power still grew ... that led to the seamless transition between Obama and Bush, where virtually nothing changed. Now people are supposed to worry about losing a bunch of Blue Dog Dems who were virturally Republicans anyway? Get a fucking clue.
Actually Anonymous, the
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 17:00 — Xander's Mimi (not verified)Actually Anonymous, the country is going to take a radical change within the next 6-8 months, and not for the better.
The national debt ceiling will be reached sometime between April & June 2011. The repugs, speaking for their uneducated supporters have said that they'll veto any effort to increase the debt ceiling. When we reach that point next year, we won't be able to borrow another penny without raising the debt ceiling. The nation will lapse into default and toss the entire globe into a depression the likes of which have never been seen before, and it's all downhill from there folks. We won't even be able to get our troops and their families home from wherever in the world they're stationed because we won't have the money, and it won't be safe for them to travel. The angry masses in those towns and villages are gonna show up at the gates of military installations with torches & pitchforks looking to get a piece of the greedy, arrogant fools who's corrupt government begat the whole mess. The people who took the majority on Tuesday will be safe and sound, and comfortably ensconced in the warm, welcoming bosom of their corporate owners, behind walls and gates, guarded by Xe stormtroopers who are handsomely paid to keep a boot on the neck of people like you and me. If the repugs go back on their word and increase the debt ceiling, that makes them liars and hypocrites. The repugs own the house - so now what?
Yes, and the indolent,
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 17:36 — Anonymous (not verified)Yes, and the indolent, self-effacing president
also does not defend his own policies.
Please email him something like this:
Dear Mr. President,
Do you recall what
Harry Truman said about the kitchen and the fire?
Have you not learned one single thing from the
intransigence and
the hostility of the
Republican Party?
It is now constituted
as a militant fascist party. You simply
can not "make nice" with
fascists. You are letting
our democratic republic
slip away into fascism
because you are doing
NOTHING to oppose evil,
in fact you are
accommodating evil,
capitulating to it
every day. If you
cannot exercise your
duty to FIGHT FASCISM
now, then step aside and
let Biden do it.
WE NEED A RESOLUTE
PRESIDENT NOW,
MR. PRESIDENT.
Remember what Truman said about the kitchen and the fire!
Nothing has changed only the
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 18:19 — Anonymous (not verified)Nothing has changed only the label. Democrats yesterday to Republicans today. They are basically the same, as have been exposed by many in those pages. Obama should be happy. He now has the excuse to continue his confused and erratic agenda with no clear goals. WH has hinted that Obama will grant the riches two more years of lower taxes. Invoking bipartisanship, of course. People know nothing of nothing. They just respond to commercials and slogans. They do not even know what they are voting against their own interests. Pathetic. The republicans won’t do anything because they are the party of NO. They are anchored in the past. The democrats will not do anything because they are the party of deception. So nothing has changed.
"Most voters have no idea
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 22:53 — Anonymous (not verified)"Most voters have no idea that the hated "bailouts" -- whose passage was among the few truly bipartisan initiatives in recent years -- were not only successful but almost free of cost to the taxpayers."
I don't call rewarding incompetence "successful".
The proper action in a liberal but also properly competitive economy is to let companies of any size fail, and step in to provide parachutes to those who don't hold executive titles to prevent shocks to demand by mass layoffs.
The presence of one particular company or another does not matter here, what matters is economic stability and viability. When you reward failure, and serve intrenched incumbent industry, you do not provide for a healthy economy.
Bail out invididuals who are fired when a big business fails, not the business itself. It's less expensive that way, and provides for a healthier economy in the long term by protecting one of the few ways the largest of the large can be dislodged from their trenches.
REGULATE THE HEALTH CARE
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 04:54 — Anonymous (not verified)REGULATE THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
STOP BAILING OUT WALL STREET
PASS THE DEBT CEILING
WE WILL NEVER ALONE HELP THE MIDDLE EAST IT IS TIME THAT THAT CHINA, EU & INDIA STEP UP ALSO
DON'T BELIEVE THE THE COMEDY CHANNEL '''''' MsNBC
OR
THE DELUSIONAL FOX NEWS
America has a great
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 18:51 — Anonymous (not verified)America has a great tradition of hucksterism. from PT Barnum and his circus to today's Tea Party politicians/leaders and their political circuses.
It is one thing to purchase a product sold by a huckster only to find it not doing what it was intended to do (usually tied in with emotional well being more than functionality), and it is quite another when one is sold a political stance that does nothing or actually operates with the opposite intended effect.
With the former product, one is out a few bucks and shelf space taken up. With the latter, one must contend with stolen wealth and political offices taken up by those who would still continue functioning against the best interest of the citizenry.