A thoughtful treatise
A Western Maryland blogger and TEA Party activist raises some good questions about Bob Ehrlich (h/t Blue Ridge Forum).
While the TEA Party movement locally may be slowly fading away as a vehicle of protest (no July 4th TEA Party was scheduled in Salisbury this year and attendance at April's event was disappointingly low) there's still that simmering resentment at party politics in general and the GOP in particular.
It's expressed in an undercurrent of backlash among certain conservative voters against Bob Ehrlich and Eric Wargotz, who are perceived by them as the "establishment" Republican candidates. Instead, they're gravitating toward upstart Brian Murphy in the GOP primary for governor as Murphy doesn't seem to be ashamed of having conservative views. The same goes for Jim Rutledge (and perhaps one or two others on a lesser scale) for the U.S. Senate nod.
The problem for Republicans is that they have a group who's been proven willing to fight for goals they believe in, but may be put off by the more centrist candidates. Many TEA Partiers (including myself) draw their inspiration from Ronald Reagan, who was thought by the conventional wisdom and many in blueblood country club Republican circles to be unelectable. They had their way in 1976 and their choice (President Ford) lost the election.
But then 1980 came along and their candidate (George H.W. Bush) lost the nomination to Reagan, who as we know blew out President Carter in the election. When Bush was elected in 1988 on Reagan's coattails, he caved to the centrists - "read my lips," anyone? - and lost to Bill Clinton. That happened in part because H. Ross Perot, who was more appealing to conservatives, ran on the Reform Party ticket. (Hey, I voted for him in 1992 as well. But I talked my ex-spouse out of voting for Clinton into voting for him so it was a wash.)
I know many of you see this as ancient history, but there are a lot of people around my age who fondly remember the Reagan years and wonder what happened to that America. I know I do.
Right now, as far as our economy goes, we are in a situation not unlike the situation 28 years ago in which Reagan found himself - high unemployment and a stagnant economy. But with Reagan we were on the upswing from the dismal Carter years and beginning about 1983 we began a roaring era of prosperity. I wouldn't bet on that given the current administration and their economic prescriptions.
So people are pretty upset - mad as hell and they're not going to take it anymore. But the perception has been cleverly placed in people's minds that the GOP was to blame for the current economic situation. Perhaps they're right, but it wasn't conservative economic policies which put us into this malaise - instead it was catering to centrists and liberals who thought only government could dig us out of the hole.
And TEA Party participants believe this as well, so a centrist Republican may say all the right things but not everyone will buy what they're selling. Once the ballot is set, I'll be the guy asking the questions.