U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint. (photo: Getty Images/Chip Somodevilla)
hen South Carolina senator Jim DeMint made the stunning announcement that he would resign from Congress to lead conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, it represented a major blow to the beleaguered Tea Party movement. Not long ago the dominant force in the Republican Party, the group now struggles both in the polls and at the ballot box.
But DeMint's departure may be the least of the right
wing's problems. Here are five more signs that the Tea Party's time may
be up:
The 2012 elections were tough on the Tea Party's
favorite congressmen. Although creative gerrymandering protected the
GOP's congressional majority, voters sent Allen West, Joe Walsh, and several other high-profile Tea Partiers packing on November 6th.
Those Tea Partiers who survived the election may not
like the Congress they return to. House Speaker John Boehner is
consolidating his power by removing
Tea Party favorites David Schweikert (R-AZ), Tim Huelskamp (R-KS) and
Justin Amash (R-MI) from their plum committee assignments - and has also
served notice that other Reps. who aren't "team players" could suffer a similar fate.
FreedomWorks - one of the largest and most influential
Tea Party groups in the country - faces an uncertain future after its
chairman, former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, left the group due to a bitter dispute with its president, Matt Kibbe.
Armey will be fine - he is reportedly receiving an $8 million golden parachute on his way out - but after FreedomWorks' highly unsuccessful 2012 results, the same can't be said with certainty about the Tea Party PAC.
Without active promotion from Fox News, the Tea Party would literally not exist. After Fox and the rest of the right-wing media epically blew their electoral predictions, however, some Republicans - such as Bruce Bartlett and David Frum - have turned against the "conservative entertainment complex."
As Bartlett wrote, "Living in the Fox News cocoon,
most Republicans had no clue that they were losing [in 2012] or that
their ideas were both stupid and politically unpopular." If more
Republicans figure out that they've been lied to, then the Tea Party
will be dead in the water (maybe that's why Fox banished failed pundits
Dick Morris and Karl Rove).
The only factor more vital to the Tea Party's success
than Fox News is the financial backing of Charles and David Koch - and
the billionaire brothers may be throttling back from the Tea Party
movement. In an interview with Forbes,
Charles Koch claimed that the brothers will spend the next year
fighting against corporate welfare (hardly an issue that animates the
Republican Party).
The Kochs have no intention of giving up the fight
long term - David Koch told Forbes that "We're going to fight the battle
as long as we breathe" - but that may actually be a bad thing for the
health of the Tea Party movement. After all, Koch-backed candidates failed miserably in the 2012 elections, creating many of the setbacks from which the Tea Party must now recover.
1 comment:
Beware a wounded animal. The tea party will not go away peacefully. As long as their president (Rush Limbaugh) and their media voice (Fox News) beat the drum for actual anarchy, the country is at risk of a physical rebellion.
Like John Wilkes Booth and the radical underground group he represented, many of these people see it as their patriotic "duty" to "save" the country. The next two years will tilt history's fulcrum, deciding whether we enter another Dark Age or continue on a path of real progress for all.
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