Opinion

The Nation

Tea Party Leads Revolution Against Itself

The Nation -- If there’s one thing to be learned from the Democratic victory in New York-26--aside from the fact that the Dems would be malpracticing incompetents if they don’t use Medicare as a silver bullet in 2012 races--it’s that money isn’t everything. Outside rightwing groups, primarily Karl Rove’s American Crossroads, outspent their progressive counterparts $1.36 million to $916,585 in an overwhelmingly red district and still lost big.

 Money may be the mother’s milk of politics, but the Tea Party base is ostensibly lactose-intolerant (at least of Keynesian spending), and Beltway greed now threatens their last remaining claim to “populism.” Killing Medicare, as Paul Ryan’s budget would do, is bad enough. But when the base also realizes that the Tea Party Republicans they elected last November are already pocketing huge amounts of cash from the same bailed-out firms they once railed against, the sense of betrayal among the ranks could become venomous.

A story in the financial publication The Deal revealed this week that the 10 Tea Party-backed House freshmen who leadership appointed to the Financial Services Committee have received almost $600,000 from Wall Street since the November election. The aim of the banks’ generosity, of course, is to cripple the legislation designed to prevent another financial meltdown--like the one that sparked the Tea Party’s anger in the first place. As The Deal’s Nicole Duran writes (subscription required):

The Republican takeover of the House of Representatives in last year's election was fueled in large part by Tea Party enthusiasts whose mistrust of government—including anger at Washington's bailout of Wall Street—fueled their organizational and monetary support for candidates who labeled themselves as populist conservatives. 

Now, a fair number of those new GOP lawmakers are raking in hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from Wall Street. At the same time, those lawmakers are now pushing legislation that would rewrite many of the provisions of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, passed last summer when Democrats still controlled both chambers of Congress. 

That so many Tea Party-backed lawmakers are now pushing pro-Wall Street legislation draws into question their commitment to the populist ethos that has characterized the movement.

Take, for example, Rep. Nan Hayworth (NY-19). During her campaign, Hayworth refused to distance herself from the extreme Tri-State Sons of Liberty; indeed, she wrote on Facebook, “I am proud to be a member and honored to have their endorsement.” Now, Hayworth is pushing the “Burdensome Data Collection Relief Act,” which would repeal the Dodd-Frank Act's CEO pay disclosure provision. That would be so heinous a burden that, as Duran points out, “In just the first three months of 2011, companies and trade organizations spent more than $5 million lobbying on behalf of Hayworth's bill, according to the Sunlight Foundation. Many of those corporations, such as Bank of America, Citigroup, and J.P. Morgan Chase, were also Hayworth donors.” ”

Or take Sean Duffy (WI-7), the former MTV Real World dude who took retiring democratic Rep. David Obey’s seat. “Since Election Day,” Duran writes, “he has added almost $250,000 to his re-election kitty, the bulk of which came from industries with business before the Financial Services Committee.” Earlier this month Duffy introduced a bill (approved by his subcommittee) that would make it easier for a council of regulators to veto any actions by the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB, of course, is the agency that Elizabeth Warren has been organizing and that Republicans are desperate to strangle in its crib, even to the laughable extent of accusing the soft-spoken academic of being a power-hungry tyrant. (On Tuesday, at a House Oversight subcommittee hearing, Rep. Patrick McHenry (NC-10) called her a liar.)

These freshmen’s cozyiness with Wall Street reveals not only the hypocrisy of Republicans who pose as Tea Party populists when it suits them; it also reveals that TP itself lives in a Potemkin Village.

As Rachel Maddow has been pointing out all along, the Tea Party powerbase is small and getting smaller since the 2010 elections. A South Carolina rally last week featuring Gov. Nikki Haley and Donald Trump was expected to draw 2000 people, but when Trump pulled out, the fearsome TP crowd amounted to…30.

The Tea Party as a mighty, monolithic force to be reckoned with exists less in reality than in the Beltway minds of the MSM and John Boehner. A recent McClatchy-Marist poll, in fact, showsthat 70 percent of registered voters who identify with the Tea Party are opposed to cutting Medicare--or Medicaid—in order to reduce the deficit. Paul Ryan, as a new ad showing him dumping Granny off a cliff makes clear, is a Patriot missile aimed right at their hearts.

But the GOP just can’t help itself--greed is such a powerful incentive. Stephen Colbert’s one-man parody of Citizens United fundraising--his “Colbert Super PAC”--hit just the right note when he offered to shake hands with the fans who gathered before the Federal Elections Commission to cheer him on—for one dollar per shake.

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103 Comments

  • 43 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    RODZILLA Fri May 27, 2011 12:57 am PDT Report Abuse
    As for Medicare, just make it a benefit for when you NEED it.

    If you are sitting on a pile of millions, then you do not get the benefit of Medicare, nor SSI, for that matter.

    Take only what you need, people.

    No? Too greedy for that?
  • 115 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 7 users disliked this comment
    Mr. Tea Bagg Thu May 26, 2011 03:14 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Cutting benefits for the middle class while at the same time giving EVEN BIGGER TAX CUTS to the RICH is not a WINNING STRATEGY.
  • 59 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    RODZILLA Fri May 27, 2011 12:52 am PDT Report Abuse
    Listen...

    This is a society.

    Do you know what that means?

    It is when people band together and work for the good of the entire group, not just the minority.

    We do this because living in mud huts and sharpening sticks to throw at potential meals is nowhere near as successful as what we can accomplish together, as a society.

    Without society, nobody has a mansion. Nobody has a Lexus. Nobody has a G-6.

    We all just struggle to get enough to live, and many won't survive.

    If that is the way you want it, then why not just give up all of your toys of society and go find a jungle area that you will not be shot for living on, and show us that you really don't need us.

    Doesn't sound like fun? but you don't need anybody. remember?

    Gop prove it. No TV. No computer. No toys at all. Go show us how it is.

    Otherwise, give back to the society that has done you so incredibly kind in putting you into a brand new Mercedes, a 9 bedroom house, and a couple of vacation homes in tropical locations.

    Don't sit there and run your mouth about how incredibly independant you are, on a computer that you did not build from scratch, and using power from a public source to do so.

    Nobody wants to hear that self-absorbed bul**hit.
  • 106 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 9 users disliked this comment
    Franchot Thu May 26, 2011 03:44 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Without Medicare, I would be dead, and that is a fact. And I'm almost 74. I want everyone to have Medicare not juat those of us post 55. Sell an aircraft carrier, get out of the war business and tax the rich to pay for Medicare. Get Microsoft anf GE to pay their fair share.
  • 91 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
    Mr. Tea Bagg Thu May 26, 2011 03:12 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Republicans opposed Medicare when it started. It was passed by a DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENT and a DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS.

    GOP hated Medicare then, trying to destroy it now.
  • 84 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 11 users disliked this comment
    Oh No! Thu May 26, 2011 05:48 pm PDT Report Abuse
    The problem with the article is that it elevates the Tea Party to some sort of reasoning, thinking group. It did not form as a reaction to spending or it would have formed 8 years ago. It formed as a reaction to Obama's election. These nuts were out there screaming about "taking their country back" and when they realized they looked like nutjobs they latched on to spending. They couldn't care less about conservative reps taking money from Wall Street. It was never about spending. It was always about how badly Obama scared them. Every teabagger I have talked to in my neighborhood justifies and rationalizes the behavior of our conservative reps. They don't care what they do as long as they look and act just like them.
  • 12 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    mas Fri May 27, 2011 01:01 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Reading comments by JW appears he is either the guy sitting on the right sitting on the beach chair, or is the alter ego of Mitt Romney----the Mitt Romney that wrote the op-ed piece on letting the auto industry go bankrupt and how President Obama should not have provided the auto bail out---then presto try and claim credit for the auto recovery. A very confused person.
  • 33 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    Mark Fri May 27, 2011 08:53 am PDT Report Abuse
    The moneyed do not want medical care for the middle class. The idea is that Americans will spend their last dollar on medical care as they die. It is capitalism at its worst and it will not get better until we stop politicians from selling out to the rich. Ask any conservative who is destroying our country and they will say the poor. Yup it is the poor who are secretly amassing billions of dollars to buy out the politicians The rich have been at war against the middle class for years and it is high time we start fighting back.
  • 30 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    CW Fri May 27, 2011 01:21 am PDT Report Abuse
    What??? The Turd Blossom could not buy an election. Say it is not so!!!!! I know that has to be one of the signs of the Apocalypse. Put on your tin foil hats and drink the Kool-Aid my fellow conservatives. The space ship will be landing momentarily.
  • 66 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 13 users disliked this comment
    528-42-71 Thu May 26, 2011 03:07 pm PDT Report Abuse
    the tea party is really not a party, it's never been on a ballot as the tea party. it's just been hanging on to the far right of the republican party coattails and they are about threadbare !!!!

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