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    The Week

    Is the GOP presidential field a Tea Party failure?

    To the dismay of many in the clamorous grassroots, the Republican nominee is all but certain to be an establishment insider 

    More than a year ago, the Tea Party capped an incredible 18-month run with a historic midterm election that took a whopping 68 House seats away from the Democrats, and handed the speaker's gavel to Republican John Boehner. No party had lost more seats in a midterm election in 72 years. While that outcome didn't surprise many activists in the Tea Party movement, it certainly appeared to catch many others off guard.

    Now the shoe seems to be on the other foot. Fourteen months after that singular achievement, the Republican field for the presidential nomination seems to have no real Tea Party candidate representing the grassroots movement's iconoclastic, anti-establishment spirit. Instead, four of the leading candidates represent the Republican establishment, while the fifth has his own personal grassroots movement supporting his candidacy.  

    Judge the Tea Party's strength by the way in which its priorities drive this election cycle.

    The front-running Mitt Romney, for instance, has been running for president for more than four years now, and his track record as governor of Massachusetts includes a health-care reform law uncomfortably close to ObamaCare — yes, the same ObamaCare that fueled the growth of the Tea Party in the first place. Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum spent years in Republican leadership in Congress. Rick Perry has been the top Republican in Texas for a decade, and recently served as chair of the Republican Governors Association, a key post in the GOP establishment. Only Ron Paul has had no leadership role in the Republican establishment, but he's also had no accomplishments in Congress after spending much of the last four decades in Washington D.C.

    It's not as if the Tea Party didn't have its opportunities. Many anticipated that Sarah Palin would run for president, but she demurred — and has yet to endorse one of the current candidates. Some wanted to see the blunt-speaking governor of New Jersey, Chris Christie, jump into the race, but Christie took a pass and endorsed Romney. The field did, for a time, include Herman Cain, who has been involved for years with the Tea Party and other conservative grassroots efforts, but who stumbled late in 2011. Rep. Michele Bachmann has a standing in the Tea Party movement nearly equal to that of Palin, and had at one point challenged for the polling lead in the race. But she faded into last place well before the Iowa caucuses.

    Does this mean the Tea Party failed in 2012? It's easy to believe that, and clearly, one can't coherently make an argument that this field represents a true Tea Party victory. However, to call it a failure is a misreading of the way grassroots movements grow, and perhaps an example of observers and analysts trying to build a narrative in the short term that simply doesn't fit into that time frame.

    Consider the impact of the New Left movement in the 1960s. Originally outside of the two-party paradigm, the rise of the New Left created a rift among Democrats during the Vietnam War that led to their disastrous 1968 convention in Chicago and resulted in the election of Richard Nixon, and then his re-election in 1972. The New Left's absorption into the Democratic Party took years — and arguably, didn't produce a legitimate presidential nominee until Barack Obama, 40 years after the Chicago convention. It took that amount of time to elect New Left candidates as state legislators, U.S. representatives and senators, and build the seniority and clout to take over the establishment of the Democratic Party, and in many cases, replace moderate Democrats in Congress as well as Republicans.

    During those decades, the advocates and activists in this movement maintained pressure on the Democratic Party. They launched think tanks, moved into the leadership of unions, and went into "community organizing," which is how our current president got his start in politics. They changed the popular culture and media to help make their views more mainstream. Instead of fighting the establishment, the New Left eventually became the establishment in the Democratic Party — so much so that Democrats founded the Democratic Leadership Council in the late 1980s that tried to pull the Democratic Party back to the center, and ended up promoting Bill Clinton for the nomination in 1992 for that very purpose.

    The Tea Party got off to a much better and less divisive start in fighting the Republican establishment than the New Left did with the Democratic Party in the 1960s. After less than two years, and without the platforms of academia and the entertainment industry for support, the Tea Party has dozens of House members and a handful of senators beholden to it. Thanks to a few effective anti-incumbent electoral efforts, the Republican establishment has developed at least a healthy respect for Tea Partiers' grassroots power. However, it will take at least a few more cycles for Tea Party–backed elected officials to grow in number and seniority, which will produce an evolution in the Republican Party — and more Tea Party–style candidates with the requisite experience and support to make legitimate runs for the presidency. Instead of judging the Tea Party on the specific candidates produced by the Republican Party less than two years after the movement began, judge the Tea Party's strength by the way in which its priorities drive this election cycle. In that sense, it's quite clear that the movement is alive and well.

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    • Saltines for Obama  •  4 mths ago
      Any endeavor that is fueled by hatred and meanness quickly burns itself out.
      • OurVanishingAmerica.wordp ... 4 mths ago
        Then explain the Democratic Party of slavery, segregation, racism and socialism's two hundred plus years existence.
      • Smarter Than Most 4 mths ago
        Right you are, Saltines. That is why the Democratic KKK faction is all but gone, and why the Tea Party movement is alive and well and still growing.
      • George 4 mths ago
        But thats where the democratic KKK boys went.
    • Rob  •  4 mths ago
      Tri-cornered hats and misspelled signs are so 2010.
      • A Yahoo! User 4 mths ago
        Haha, the photos of those uneducated and racist fools at the Tea Supremacist rallies were classic.
      • kye 4 mths ago
        the tea party will control this election in 2012 , get used to it #$%$hole !!
      • Marat 4 mths ago
        Wishful thinking, Kye. They could've done but they probably won't with their rabid antics.
    • Gun Lovin' Lefty  •  4 mths ago
      One word: YES!!!
      • Gladys Kravitz 4 mths ago
        Well, when politicians pander to the extremes, this is what happens. Most of us are moderates, niether liberal nor conservative. They would be smarter to try to attract us than pander to the kooky fringes.
    • diplomat  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      All T party politicians elected in 2010 to congress immediately signed up for the congressional pension plan and congressional health plan. ALL! 100%. Then they set out to deny health insurance for the middle class and poor and to destroy all other pension plans. Fact--not opinion.
      • Christopher Pinola 4 mths ago
        Thank You for that information, because I didn't know that. In return,Watch for FREE on HULU and watch the video "GAS HOLE" it's under News and Information, It will show you how THE BIG OIL COMPANIES AND U.S. POLITICIANS are F***ING the AMERICAN PEOPLE. in 1949 Shell Oil had a car that was getting 149.95 MPG. In 1955 a man designed a car that was getting close to 100 MPG Shell bought it from him for a Million, In 1977 Tom Ogle designed the Vapor Car in El Paso, Texas it was getting a little over a 100MPG, Shell Oil tried to buy it from Tom Ogle and he would not sell, Shell Oil had him MURDERED (Google the name Tom Ogle, but the video tells you more with eye witnesses and News Paper headlines in El Paso). Watch it..... very educational. Go to the movie section of HULU and type in the box "GAS HOLE".
      • James Gospel 4 mths ago
        The Teabaggers were born in HATEand in HELL. Where were they when Bush increased the deficit by $10 trillion and the great RECESSION. Clinton left Bush with PROJECTED $5 trillion SURPLUS
      • Jack 4 mths ago
        The car that does 80mpg already exists, but people still prefer to drive SUVs. And some mopeds can do over 100mpg. We'll just have to wait until the oil starts running out and people will have no choice.
    • Carl  •  Meriden, Connecticut  •  4 mths ago
      Patsies for the Koch brothers. Un-American and Un compromising. Throw them out!!!
      • JustSomePerson 4 mths ago
        yup!!!
      • ThomasM 4 mths ago
        carl; do you have any realistic thoughts?
      • Windriver 4 mths ago
        Carl has been educated by the Hitler Youth division of the Progressive party with nary an original thought in his head.
    • Mary anne  •  4 mths ago
      The Koch Billionaire Brothers are totally behind the Tea Party movement folks! So beware.....
    • Michael C  •  4 mths ago
      Obama doesn't think the Teabaggers are a failure. They're going to get him re-elected because every GOP candidate will have to make such outrageous promises to the Teabaggers that whoever wins will be unelectable in the general.
    • Rolls Eyes  •  4 mths ago
      Ronald Reagan, who closed tax loopholes, increased the Capital Gains rate, signed into law an anti-discrimination bill (for gay teachers), granted amnesty and a path to citizenship for almost 3 million illegal immigrants and who negotiated with our sworn enemy (the USSR) would be called a "libtard" by today's Tea Goons and wouldn't have a prayer of getting the GOP nomination in 2012.
    • Old Geezer  •  4 mths ago
      Why doesn't the Tea Party embrace Ron Paul? I thought they were all about shrinking government, lowering taxes and getting the budget under control. I guess the real reason for the Tea Party was to promote thier Ultra Orthodox right wing, evangelical Christianity and their racist hatred to anyone who is not Arayan White!
    • Tim P  •  Tacoma, Washington  •  4 mths ago
      The Tea Party, in 2008, had an approval rating of 64%, and that is amazing! But in 20012, it is only 6% nationally... I don't think the tea parties presidential candidates are the failures, it's the Tea Party themselves! Case in point... Walker, Winsonsins Governor, is being recalled.. The first week he was in office, he gave $750,000,000 to the wealthy, and abolished union rights! By doing so, he went against his voters... They only needed 500,000 votes for the recall, and they got more than 1,000,000! That most definately says it all!
    • Gabriel  •  Irvine, California  •  4 mths ago
      but if they fail and lose the election then are they dead yet or are these guys vampires?
    • Bob  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      Tealiban : Dumb and Proud Of It!
    • PeeLoSee  •  4 mths ago
      How did the Tea Party ever convince so many redneck cons that they are part of the 1 percent?
    • Bob  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      Rupert Murdoch is going to have to buy more TV stations to employ his failed political shills
    • Rahmbo  •  4 mths ago
      That 2011 Tea Bagger Infested DID NOTHING CONGRESS ___ FAILURE
    • Just Ducky  •  4 mths ago
      The Tea Party is dead. The GOP is on life support, due to the tea they drank in 2010.
    • Bob  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      Ask Ex-Gov "Recall" Walker ...
    • MICHAEL  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  4 mths ago
      I'm a voting Republican, and I will not knowingly vote for candidates who align themselves with the evangelical wings of the Tea Party, or subscribe to the Grover Norquist pledge. If that means I have to find a conservative Democrat {yes, there are some} to vote for, so be it.
    • ELKE  •  4 mths ago
      Please/ stop your stupid saying obama is a comunist.i was born in one thyre is nothing about obama being a comunist.Believe me if he was , all of you w'ho bashed obama and the goverment, you all would be in prison now, you have freedom of speach for which you would not have if he was. so stop being so stupid and ignorance you don't know personaly nothing about.
    • Shoefly  •  Astoria, New York  •  4 mths ago
      Tea Party Governor Nikki Hailey of SC., in her State of the State address, Raised Taxes and advocating spending more Money! Talking the Talk and walking the Walk are two differnt things!!!