The Future Of The Tea Party According To Karl Rove

February 19th, 2010 (6) Posted By Erik Wong.

tea-party-protest1

Rove.com:

The power of the movement is its independence from Democrats and the GOP.

There has been a lot of talk about combining the tea party movement with the Republican Party. And on a small scale, that seemed to happen last week in South Carolina after state GOP representatives agreed to create a “Tea Party Republicans” group to coordinate activities with tea partiers in Greenville and Spartanburg.

This week, however, those arrangements fell apart as some tea party groups dissented from the decision. Other attempts to draw tea party groups into formal alliances are running into similar difficulties. That is a good thing. The tea party movement will be more effective than it otherwise would be if it refuses to allow itself to become an appendage of either major political party.

The tea partiers have made an important splash because they are not yet another auxiliary to the Democratic or Republican parties. Like the pro-life and Second Amendment movements before it, the tea party movement will have a bigger impact if it holds the feet of politicians in both parties to its fire. Each party must know it can win or lose swing tea party voters.

The movement arose spontaneously as ordinary Americas reacted to a rising tide of federal spending and debt, growing federal power, and the too-cozy relationship between Washington and corporate America.

The bank bailout in the fall of 2008 may have lit the fuse, but the tea party movement began in earnest last April 15 with protests after congressional Democrats and the Obama administration unleashed a torrent of spending: the stimulus package, a swollen omnibus appropriations bill, and auto company bailouts. Democrats also raised the specter of new energy taxes when the House passed a cap-and-trade bill.

The movement’s activity reached a fever pitch in August with raucous town hall meetings where senators and congressmen felt the burning-hot opposition of tea partiers to ObamaCare.

The tea parties have drawn into politics many Americans who were previously on the sidelines. In recent months, for example, I have met with local tea party leaders as varied as a grizzled Vietnam vet in his biker jacket, an oncology nurse from a small hospital, a woman at the car rental counter, scads of retired seniors (many of them war veterans), and a passel of a stay-at-home moms, including one who organized a tea party protest in front of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s San Francisco office.

What these people have in common is a deep concern about the future of the country that their children and grandchildren will inherit. Many are also considering the next steps for their movement and often conflicted about its political course.

My advice to them is to keep their distance from any single party and instead influence both parties on debt, spending and an over-reaching federal government. Allowing third-party movements to co-opt the tea partiers’ good name, which is happening in Nevada, will only serve to elect opponents of the tea party philosophy of low-taxes and fiscal restraint. It could also discredit the tea party movement.

A small fraction of the tea partiers’ leadership are ambitious individuals who haven’t been able to hold office in either the GOP or Democratic Party. Some are from fringe groups like the John Birch Society or the remnants of the LaRouchies. Others see the tea party movement as a recruiting pool for volunteers for Ron Paul’s next presidential bid.

If tea party groups are to maximize their influence on policy, they must now begin the difficult task of disassociating themselves from cranks and conspiracy nuts. This includes 9/11 deniers, “birthers” who insist Barack Obama was not born in the U.S., and militia supporters espousing something vaguely close to armed rebellion.

The GOP is also better off if it foregoes any attempt to merge with the tea party movement. The GOP cannot possibly hope to control the dynamics of the highly decentralized galaxy of groups that make up the tea party movement. There will be troubling excesses and these will hurt Republicans if the party is formally associated with tea party groups.

We’ve seen the rugged populism akin to the tea party movement emerge in our nation’s history before, often as a force for good and sometimes for ill. This episode is likely to make a positive impact if its members keep their political choices private while making their policy demands public.

The Republican Party and the tea party movement have many common interests right now. But they are, and should remain, distinct from one another. This is one instance when, if they merged, the sum would be less than the parts.

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  • CPLViper

    Thanks Karl for the knowledge based advice but as a “Tea Partier” my advice is a little different and I believe more on target. The Tea Party should not engage in a merger with the Republican party, rather a hostile take over it. You know, where we move in and remove the sitting leadership and find people who will run the “company” better.

    • http://www.bootparkergriffith.com The Sentinel at the Gate

      After a lifetime as a loyal Republican, I can no longer blindly support the insanity of the Republican Party. And I never could support the Democratic Party after witnessing the beginnings of the radical fringe element of the Democratic Party and their treatment of the Viet Nam Vets, their glorification of the teachings of Mao and Marx and their willingness for violence based on their idiotic beliefs that they were right and everyone else was wrong.

      I’ve contributed to the local Tea Party, Joe Wilson and Scott Brown. Never again will I ever send a dime to the Republican Party and I could care less if they are starving on the street corner selling pencils in a tin cup. The Rockefeller machine (along with other “conservative blue bloods”) have been running this party into the ground for decades. We’ve all been witness to this “tough talk” in front of the cameras and to people when it comes voting time only to see them cut deals with the “Children of the Corn” behind the closed doors of Mordor on the Potomac.

      Last month, I attend a local Tea Party meeting and cautioned these youngsters of the consequences of allowing their movement to be watered down or cooped by the Republicans. I told them their effectiveness was in their numbers, their true independence from either party and their message of the true intent and wording of our Constitution. Lastly, I told them they should make candidates come to them and not the other way around.

      Basically, the Republican Party (from a leadership perspective) is no different from the Democratic Party – they both want absolute power and will lie, cheat and steal to get it. The only way we can return this country to greatness is to think for ourselves, demand proper leadership, remain constantly vigilant and make politicians accountable for their actions. And when our reps don’t act in the best interest of our Nation and our district, then we will throw the bums out with no return ticket.

      Everyone, take action now or be prepared to take lives later when Big Brother and Big Sister (party immaterial) come for your rights!

  • Guy

    I agree. The Republican party in its current state is no answer for those of us who have had it with Washington DC. We need to run the weak and cowardly out of office. Splitting off to a third or fourth party, is a waste of time and a disservice to all who care where this country is heading. We should let the Democratic Party eat its own and destroy itself. While blowing out liberal Democrats, we must take the GOP over as well, one replacement at a time. We need to make it very clear that a RHINO has no place in the party. Game over career Politicos!

  • David

    Keep it a “Movement”, not a part of any party. Keep it leaderless, for all the “leaders” will do is try to perpetuate their power. Keep it simple: Lower taxes, lower spending, less government intrusion in our lives and STICK TO THE CONSTITUTION AND BILL OF RIGHTS.

    • John

      AMEN

  • John

    BUT, END the FED and Abolishing the IRS is key to the long term independence and liberty to United States citizens…

    Comment on that Karl?