Matt Towery: Tea Party movement has politicians shaking in their shoes
by Matt Towery
Columnist
April 19, 2010 12:00 AM | 761 views | 4 4 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Matt Towery
Matt Towery
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - Whenever I'm in the nation's capital, it's always entertaining to see government staff, aides, lobbyists and elected officials doing their thing. They can make you feel like an outsider - unless, that is, you were there when Ronald Reagan was sworn in, doing then as they are doing now. Then you realize that they're just younger versions of yourself.

With age and experience comes a trace of wisdom. In talking to various Washington insiders over the last few days, I've noticed a predominant theme: The GOP establishment hasn't a clue how to manage the so-called Tea Party movement. And the Democrats are equally clueless as they try to profile and pigeonhole these new activists.

I've been closely watching Tea Partiers since about this time last year. I noticed early on that establishment Republican elected officials have been letting the Tea Party march right on past. These officeholders are afraid they'll be seen as radical if they associate with the protest movement.

Conventional Washington wisdom seems to have it that moderate, swing voters in the fall general elections will turn away from the GOP if the party ends up with nominees for Congress who are either self-identified as Tea Partiers or are somehow associated with them.

Consider this oddity: Sen. John McCain has long been cold-shouldered by the GOP establishment, which has thought of him as too liberal for the party's taste. Now he is suddenly viewed as a part of that very establishment, which is itself now deemed too liberal. Believe me when I tell you that the very notion of a spontaneous conservative grassroots movement that they can't get a handle on has this town's Republican operatives baffled.

The Democrats are even more in the dark. They have persuaded themselves that the Tea Party crowd is one and the same with the so-called "birthers," who believe President Obama was not born in the United States and should not be eligible to serve as president. The Democrats welcome the Tea Party because they believe it will divide the GOP and bring to the fore weaker and less experienced Republican candidates in November. Either that, they believe, or it will cause a big chunk of disenchanted Republican voters - either establishment or Tea Party - to sit out this year's general election altogether.

I love Washington - it's in my blood. But I've been here so many times that I've come to see clearly that the capital city is one whose inhabitants talk almost exclusively among and about themselves. That was true when I was here in the 1980s and 1990s, it's true now, and it was probably true in early post-colonial days. Where else on earth do men still wear neckties to gatherings on Sunday night? It's an insulated company town that's only interested in the gossip and inside perspectives of the "company" - politics and government.

What will become of the Tea Party movement? I suspect that in some cases, there will be Tea Party Republicans who will run against and clean the clocks of their Republican primary opponents. There will be other cases in which the Tea Party candidates will lose badly, either because they are little more than well-meaning amateurs or because their establishment GOP opponents have enough conservative bona fides to satisfy conservative voters.

Either way, the Tea Party will not split the GOP this year. The movement, though not as large as some like to portray it, is still a powerful force. The Tea Party is an indication of how heavy the voter turnout on the Republican side likely will be in November, regardless of who the GOP nominee might be for a given office.

I keep reading media reports that try to portray some Tea Partiers as racist. They keep insisting that alleged racial slurs were hurled at certain members of Congress when the health care bill was being considered. Much media, like many Beltway insiders, are characterizing as a racist-inspired fringe element what is in fact a loud manifestation of anger and fear over taxes, government growth, and possible abridgements of future liberty and security.

I don't buy it. The Tea Party may or may not be substantial enough to transform the GOP into a more conservative party. But my polling tells this: We are likely to see Republican primaries this year that will be contested as never before. And that means there could be an avalanche of Americans voting Republican in November.

The Tea Party effort is both symbolic and a catalyst. It will end up spurring a rush of voter intensity the GOP hasn't seen since 1994. Oh, yes, I liked this town a lot in those days.

Matt Towery heads the polling firm InsiderAdvantage.
Comments
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Silent No More
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September 24, 2010
My husband and I are two of the silent supporters of the Tea Party - We cannot wait util Nov.
Just Nasty & Mean
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April 19, 2010
There is a HUGE silent support for the tenants of the Tea Party movement and DemocRats are going to find out in November.

You can tell the Dems are scared, and you can tell by their actions. They've dragged out Bill Clinton, all the race baiters, half the Congress to attempt to disparage, demean and taint the movement as "Tim McVeigh Wannabes".

Dems are running scared---and after unilaterally disarming, running the debt through the ceiling, takeover of autos, brokerages, banks, student loans, mortgages, insurance, healthcare and now planning to move on Amnesty and Cap & Trade.

DemocRats are killing themselves, but they want to demonize and blame the Tea Party.

Sorry...we've got your number. You are outta here!
U.S. Freedom
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April 19, 2010
To Mr. Towery, All Current Elected Officials, & All Future Candidates- Just because someone does not attend a Tea Party event or is not a formal member of a Tea Party does not mean they don't agree with the Tea Party movement. People who agree with the Tea Party movement are tired of being taken for granted, are tired of the direction this country has taken for several yrs & is taking right now. We are totally fed up and have been pushed over the edge with the present administration. We will not remain silent or inactive. We will be voting to stop this country from becoming 100% govenment controlled.
Agree
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April 19, 2010
A great column, explains a lot about the political power in this country. Those people who try to manage us like chess pieces should get out into this country and see what the people are really thinking. And if Republicans want to win, they would do well to listen to the tea partiers who actually speak for a lot of us.
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