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OPINION

Kathleen Parker: Tea party's purity tests could damage GOP

Wednesday, May 5, 2010
(Updated 3:00 am)

WASHINGTON -- No one doubts the sincerity or power of the tea party movement anymore. We get it: free market principles, limited government and individual liberty.

Those are the three fundaments of the tea party's "Contract from America," to which any serious Republican must subscribe, nay, sign in blood.

Nowhere is this new power-to-the-people imperative in starker relief than in Utah -- one of the nation's reddest states -- where three-term conservative Sen. Bob Bennett seems likely to lose the Republican Party nomination this weekend.

This, despite the fact that Bennett earns an 84 rating from the American Conservative Union, an A ranking from the National Rifle Association -- and is nothing like a liberal.

But Bennett committed the ultimate sin in tea party circles. He voted for the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), aka "bank bailout," during the George W. Bush administration. And he advanced a market-driven health care reform bill as an alternative to the Democratic plan that, alas, also included an insurance mandate.

Never mind that a Republican president proposed the bailout, or that many Republicans and free marketers felt TARP was crucial to keep the economy from capsizing. For those who have forgotten, the point was to prop up the credit system to keep enough money flowing so that the "free market" didn't collapse entirely.

What was the alternative? What might have happened without TARP? As Mitt Romney, who supported TARP, has said, "We were on a precipice. ... Now we can sit back and say, 'Oh, it wasn't so scary.' Well, frankly, it was a very scary time for a lot of people. And that's something which was resolved."

Tea partiers mostly upset about subsequent spending have cast a wide net, and any incumbent is liable to be snared -- even the good ones, such as Bennett, who is widely respected in Washington and has been endorsed by establishment Republicans Newt, Mitt & Karl (Gingrich, Romney and Rove).

Then again, being an establishment favorite in an anti-Washington environment may be as disadvantageous as having an Ivy League degree. Those out-of-touch elites, you know.

But in their rush to banish all but the purest fiscal conservatives, tea partiers risk losing some of their strongest voices and diminishing their power in an arena where relationships matter. Bennett, for example, worked with Democrat Ron Wyden to co-sponsor his health care proposal.

What non-ideologues may see as cooperation, however, is viewed by true believers as weakness. Any attempt at compromise is viewed as surrendering principle. Under the new order, a Good Conservative wouldn't cross the aisle to perform a Heimlich Maneuver.

The long-promised purge is on, in other words, and anyone fantasizing about bipartisanship can choke on that hope.

If Obamaphiles have been sipping Kool-Aid, Bennett's primary challengers have been steeping in the bitter tea of an angry electorate. Indeed, more than two-thirds of delegates to the upcoming Utah Republican convention consider themselves to be tea party supporters.

Much the same is happening in other states. In Arizona, veteran John McCain, whose American Conservative Union rating last year was only 63, is fighting for the Senate seat he has held for more than 23 years against tea party favorite J.D. Hayworth. In Indiana, Rep. Mark Souder was pummeled by car dealer-challenger Bob Thomas for his vote on TARP. In Florida, Marco Rubio has the tea winds at his back for the U.S. Senate nomination, which forced Gov. Charlie Crist to declare himself an independent.

Funny about that TARP vote, though, reminiscent as it is of the Iraq war vote that Barack Obama ran against but, not yet having been elected to the U.S. Senate, wasn't called upon to cast. Would all those running against TARP now have voted against it had they been in Washington with the full weight of economic collapse on their shoulders?

It is certainly not objectionable that Americans reshuffle the deck now and then. Entrenched politicos become too beholden over time to special interests, as well as to the very relationships that sometimes can be useful to the common good.

But in purging impure Republicans from the ranks, tea partiers ultimately may manage to further shrink the GOP by alienating those repelled by purity tests. Nothing dissuades like righteousness. And though tea partiers pledge allegiance to no party, Republicans clearly are more aligned with their principles than Democrats.

If good-faith, conservative legislators such as Bennett fail to pass muster, who will be brave enough to legislate?

If no one, then what?

E-mail: kathleenparker@washpost.com

Comments

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Get A Clue

May 5, 2010 - 5:40 am EDT

Kathleen, when your very first sentence is absolutely wrong, it's a safe bet the rest of your column is just as bad.

And it is.

Panacea

May 5, 2010 - 8:04 am EDT

Oh, I don't know. She made some good points. While I don't think the Tea Party is going to destroy the Republican Party, i do think they are going to hand a lot of seats to Democrats, independants, or even third parties. But they'll win a few, I'm sure.

It's a mixed bag of nuts.

Kit9

May 5, 2010 - 9:29 am EDT

Go Tea Party! Give Us Those Democratic Seats in Government! We Thank You!

Bilbo

May 5, 2010 - 10:48 am EDT

..the schism going on between the Tea Party and the GOP will eventually marginalize both...the GOP will be the party of fiscally conservative individuals who value core basic social rights....the Tea Party will be both fiscally conservative (except when a republican is in office) and intolerant socially on basic social rights..I am reminded of the schism between the moderates and the conservatives in the Southern Baptist Convention...and we all know what happened there...

rmacz

May 5, 2010 - 1:55 pm EDT

Yeah...and Bill and Barry like their pork...ha! Obama knows not to bite the hand that feeds him. http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0510/36783.html
We know what will happen here too.

citywatcher

May 5, 2010 - 11:15 am EDT

Well the tea party has already been labeled as racists right wing extremest nuts. Whether its true or not is irrelevant and Sarah Palin's involvement is not helpful because she herself is viewed as a right wing nut. Republicans will win some seats in November but they will not take over the house and senate. Republicans will also lose the 2012 presidential election because the economy is already on a slow recovery. If the public sees any kind of improvement in the economy they will re-elect Obama. A heavy black voter turn out will also keep Obama in office, a big reason why some traditional red states (NC, Virginia and Indiana) went blue in 2008.

tonymo

May 5, 2010 - 1:08 pm EDT

Tea Partiers make more money and are better educated than most Americans, a new poll out Thursday found. From a CBS/NY Times poll in April.

We know they are certainly better educated than most of you fools that troll these pages proudly exhibiting your ignorance!

And from Rasmussen: Tea Party 48% Obama 44%

On major issues, 48% of voters say that the average Tea Party member is closer to their views than President Barack Obama. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 44% hold the opposite view and believe the president’s views are closer to their own

So you good folks keep attacking people who are much more educted, earn more, and are more informed about the issues. It says more about you than it says about this growing movement of true Patriots who actually understand the Constitution, and what made this country great. Hint, it wasn't government!

Panacea

May 5, 2010 - 1:12 pm EDT

Education has little to do with this. Correlation is not causation.

The Tea Party is just the KKK with good shoes.

tonymo

May 5, 2010 - 4:45 pm EDT

You are the typical dishonest nanny stater. Even when show proof of who really comprises ther Tea Party movement you continue to use demagoguery to diminish real Americans, not you "what can my government do for ME" slugs that now slime our once great society!

The Tea Party movement is the closest thing we have today like our 18th Century Patriots. People like you would have supported the Monarchy's oppression of the people. You will support anyoine that promises you things bought with other people's money.

Panacea

May 5, 2010 - 7:06 pm EDT

I find the Tea Party's objections to be oddly timed. They had plenty of opportunities to voice their objections under the eight years of Bush administration's dismantling of conservative principles. They didn't raise a whisper of protest.

Obama gets elected and suddenly, "it's time to take back our country from government."

The Tea Party is NOTHING like the Founding Fathers.

rmacz

May 5, 2010 - 8:24 pm EDT

At least we got a tax cut under Bush, and I remember getting a stimulus check mailed directly to me, along with the rest of America. Obama on the other hand, gets a free pass on the debt, high unemployment, Katrina Two, and his affair. http://www.nationalenquirer.com/obama_cheating_scandal_vera_baker_video_...
There is defiantly a double standard here.

westronandnan@aol.com

May 5, 2010 - 3:50 pm EDT

To qualify for the support of the Tea Party, one must be narrow minded enough to see through a keyhole with both eyes. And, that's sad for the Republicans, but a cause for rejoicing among the Democrats.

tonymo

May 5, 2010 - 4:53 pm EDT

This last idiotic comment show just how detached from reality you, and people like you are. You simply choose to ignore the polls you don'rt agree with. I guess you also don't believe that the blood bath that began with Va, NJ, and the People's Republic of Ma., is just the begining. I guess you also dispute the polls concerning the nosedive in the polls for your Messiah, your radical, outlaw congress, and almost all of their policies.

Believe me, ignorance is not bliss! I'll be looking forward to your post election comments in November. Today the powerful chairman of the Appropriations Committee decided to "spend more time with his family," or he looked at the polls telling him he's toast!

I believe that God put you liberals here for the amusement of the rest of us! See you in November!

wscbd

May 5, 2010 - 4:55 pm EDT

Sheesh, Tony... You ARE a 'mo.

rmacz

May 5, 2010 - 5:36 pm EDT

Obama has no room to talk. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/may/05/strong-brew/
Something must be in the liberal's genes here.

westronandnan@aol.com

May 5, 2010 - 3:56 pm EDT

I read that poll, but from my conversations and observations --- both first hand --- I challenge the validity of the poll.

My experience with a Tea Party rally in San Antonio was that it was almost. . . .almost equal to the intelligence and income of those who would occupy the front row at a Willie Nelson concert. Not that I have anything against Willie or those who go to the shows.

But to make them appear to be a bunch of freakin' Rhode's Scholars or intellectuals, unless you call listening to Limbaugh, Hannity, Beck and O'Reilley an intellectual qualifier, is indeed, a stretch.

TruthOnly

May 5, 2010 - 6:06 pm EDT

We understand the frustration of the opponent imagining their superstitions defaming the great TP when they only need check their own mirror to see the real racist.
Kathleen has a point. She is an international syndicated columnist since 1987 for the Washington Post plus consulting member of the famed Buckley Conservative School of Public Speaking and a regular on outstanding shows such as The O'Reilley Factor and a NY Times best sellers Save The Males and Why Men Matter plus Why Women Should Care.
Parker has also written conservatively for newspapers like USA Today from Florida to California and in magazines such as Time, Cosmopolitian, Town and Country, Weekly Standard, The Daily Beast and others including Fortune Business Magazine.She has won many coveted awarded in her storied career such as the HL Meneken Award and recently won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for the third time.

Parker who grew up in Florida getting her undergrad from Florida State and holds a Master and PHd is also married to a high profile South Carolina attorney for decades where she has also resided with her three sons.

She is very keen on the direction of the pro-conservative movement in America as is overall 65% of Americans today in a recent polling and also pro-active in keeping the TP movement in line who represent 48% of this movement.

Being acutely aware of those who seem to straddle the fence on certain issues such as the wasteful policies of the current occupant in the White House running 400% debt excess over even big spender Bush in the past 2 budgets of his administration with an astounding 1.85 trillion deficit. Bush on the other hand had a 2008 deficit of 480 billion.

Parker is very concerned that when the Democrats are ousted from power in November in the House and Senate that those who have worked in cooperation with the Democrats in such catastrophic bills like the socialist bail-outs or health care disasters along with destroying Wall St financial corps like Lehman, Smith Barney, or now Goldman will become entangled again with these socialist Democrats and greatly damage the purity of the future changes to revert America back to its conservative capitalist free enterprise roots.

Many at the top hope Parker continues to be a guilding force in the coming November conservative revolutionary process as advisor and hopefully in 2012 when the White House is returned safely back too the rightful owners of middle America where the true backbone and strength lies in mass numbers. Parker is also closely tabulating the immigration clause success in Arizona and helping to prepare the coming national change reform to enforce existing laws and return tens of millions of illegals back across the border.

Change is definitely on the way for the better for America and the great American prosperous way of life for the majority of its citizens as has been has been the case since the Tea Party in 1775 initiated it all causing the Great Revolution Emancipation by the great Founding Fathers in 1777 victory and later ratification of the US Constitution in 1791.

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