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December 28, 2009
Warner Todd Huston Tea Parties: The Biggest Mistake We’ll Make in 2010
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It's the end of 2009, the "aughts" are over, and we are about to embark on a new year -- and what else are they but the "aughts"? Well, besides mostly a horrible and thankfully passed decade. In any case, we are at the end of the year and that means two things: lists about this year and predictions for the next. I've chosen the prognosticator's art for this piece with the subject of what will likely be our biggest failure or mistake in 2010: the Tea Party movement.

We all know that just saying the words "Tea Party" is enough to raise American's blood pressure. Some will become suspicious or even enraged by imagining I am about to attack the Tea Partiers, some on the left will be filled with disgust even thinking about the Tea Partiers at all, and still others will get their blood up thinking about why the Tea Party movement started in the first place. For 2009 "Tea" and "Party" were two words that raised American's passions in a myriad of ways, for sure. That won't change in 2010.

But with the Tea Party movement we are likely headed for a huge mistake in 2010, one that I fear will stretch into 2011 and one that has the potential to hurt us all, right, left and center -- but especially right.

The nature of the Tea Party movement was unusual at the outset. Regardless of what the half-wits on the extreme left said about them -- whackjobs like your Keith Olbermanns or Rachel Maddows -- the Tea Party movement was not orchestrated behind the scenes by some grand, right-wing conspiracy. They happened spontaneously spearheaded by all sorts of different groups, hundreds of them in fact. And to use the hackneyed old expression, trying to organize them into a single, national power will be like herding cats.

And therein lies the soon to be revealed mistake. Unless we are able to foresee this limitation of the Tea Party movement and take concrete measures to prevent it we will see the passion and engagement of these millions of Americans frittered away until just cynicism is left.

Passion about politics is great and likely the fervor of Tea Party participants will help fuel a 2010 resurgence of Republicans in the midterm elections. But what after that? In fact, what during it?

Here's the problem and, as I see it, it's a problem that is actually sort of built right into the Tea Party movement from its inception. That would be its essentially leaderless nature. Certainly this leaderless nature has suited the tastes of those suspicious of government, tired of failed party machinations, and the preternaturally aloof folks that populated them. Perhaps the gatherings could have occurred no other way and are born of this peculiar instant of political sensibility. Nonetheless Tea Parties have been disparate, unfocused, leaderless, and might prove to be pointless in the end.

There was no unifying single goal of the Tea Partiers and no agency or party directing them. This means that the raw power behind them just might go untapped because there will be no way to translate the passion to power. Every transformative movement has been led by a single man and his small group of powerful adherents but the Tea Party movement has no such leader and might just find that its passion will dissipate until there is nothing left but disgruntled followers.

Don't get me wrong, I love the passion and was thrilled by the hundreds of Tea Parties with their millions of participants as it happened across this land in 2009. I was heartened that so many Americans were standing up to the anti-American left like that. But how do we channel that passion into something that can lead to positive change?

Without question powerful change needs is a leader. Unfortunately, unless a leader steps forward that can gather all those many Tea Party strings into a single strong rope, it is likely that the whole thing will just pass away and be left a footnote in history. And what will this do to those yearning for change? What else could it do but cause them to become even more cynical going out than when they came in, leaving them thinking that nothing can be done and that we are doomed? This could lead to even worse societal strife down the road as frustrations build.

The other thing change needs is funding. Let's face it, change cannot come without money and while Tea Partiers have not yet been stingy with political donations, it has been like a scattergun as opposed to an aimed and powerful rifle shot. Whether we like it or not, money is and always has been the life's blood of politics and we Tea Party goers must find a way to harness the interest we all have had in change and parlay that into political donations that will lead to a successful take over of our political scene. We can't bend politics to our will without money. Reagan knew it, Richard Viguerie knew it, even Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority knew it. These famous conservatives were able to channel political donations in the millions of dollars to the right places and conservatism became a powerful force because of it.

The closest the Tea Party folks have come to major change based on donations was with the recent candidacy of Doug Hoffman in New York's 23rd and if you'll remember it was a failed effort. It was, though, a small example of what might be done to good effect. It should also be noted that, in keeping with this nebulous nature I've mentioned, the Hoffman effort was wholly ad hoc and unfocused.

So, I see trouble brewing ahead for the Tea Party movement one that might lead to its being wasted and the frittering away of these potentially powerful passions will be the biggest mistake the right could make. Sadly, I can almost see no way to prevent it from happening.

So, Happy New Year, sure, but let's keep all this in mind and find a way to weld the Tea Party passion into action.

My Other Tea Party Movement Discussions

Old GOP Doesn’t ‘Get’ Tea Parties

Book Review: What Are These Tea Parties About, Anyway?

Tea Party Debate Continued: My Reply to Steve McQueen of BigGovernment.com

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  • Uhhh, ever heard of someone named Sarah Palin. The natural default leader of a constitutional movement.

    Sarah Palin isn't any more a constitutionalist than her a$$-crack buddy John McCain.

    RWR
  • vote24
    Uhhh, ever heard of someone named Sarah Palin. The natural default leader of a constitutional movement. And all this arguing over voting for whom? Vote for the best candidate in your eyes. It's just that simple. If the dems win by default, so be it. Their candidates will be shown to be marxists and the tide will turn. I don't believe it is as much of a game as most of you. Vote in the primaries. We have victory within reach. The Dems are SH@%TING THEMSELVES DAILY. Stay the course.
  • SGT_Jones
    pvt_Jones (sorry had to demote you for you badly garbled attempt).

    Nothing "Ad hominem" about them.

    Let me explain - I've spent 14 months in Bosnia and 13 months in Iraq protecting your freedom to be a pompous blow hard. If you want to address me by my rank you can either use the correct rank, or get stuffed.
  • I will evaluate all candidates and weigh them according to my own values, and if I find them wanting I will not vote for them, period.

    I just weigh them according to their willingness to follow the Constitution. It will always be the right answer that way.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • Candidates should never be assured they will get votes because of their party no matter what views they espouse.

    Repeat that 50,000 times between now and tomorrow. It's the most intelligent thing that's been said on this thread.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • A third party effort will just waste time, money, and energy.

    Amen.

    The Republicans should really stop wasting time, money, and energy trying to beat us back.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • 2010 will be critical in determinig whether we can reform the GOP or if it should be veiwed as the opposition.

    The GOP will have absolutely ZILCH chance of reforming unless there are enough people who think and operate as I do - with the belief that the GOP is the opposition until proven otherwise.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • A third party effort will just waste time, money, and energy.


    The attitude that we should vote for the Republican no matter how much we disagree with him or her is what brought us John McCain in '08. Candidates should never be assured they will get votes because of their party no matter what views they espouse. I will vote for the person, not the party. I will not vote for candidates whose views are widely divergent from my own, regardless of what letter they put after their names. I don't subscribe to that "if he agrees with me 60% it's better than the guy who agrees with me 40%" crap, either. I will evaluate all candidates and weigh them according to my own values, and if I find them wanting I will not vote for them, period.
  • Nothing "Ad hominem" about them. They were specific and right on. You didn't read the piece, you commented off topic, and you assumed the piece was anti-tea party when it wasn't. Then you came in pretending to know history and claimed that the Whigs were around during the founding. You missed on all cylinders. Like I said, next time you deign to comment on something actually read it first.

    Lastly, the GOP is in no way as bad a shape now as the Whigs were then. As unfortunate as it is, the GOP is not in danger o disappearing too soon.

    The fatal mistake too many of us conservatives make is that we assume that the GOP is a "conservative" party. The truth is conservatism was a late addition to the GOP and we are in the minority in the party. Further we conservatives always have been in the minority in the GOP.

    In the end, politics isn't where we should focus our energy. Education is. We need to take over our educational establishment from the anti-American, left-wing estate that currently owns our schools. That is the only way we'll be able to take the country back toward true Americanism.

    A third party effort will just waste time, money, and energy.
  • SGT_Jones
    Ad hominem attacks aside, my point remains valid - when political parties are no longer relevant they die out and are replaced by something better. It's happened before, and it will happen again (and yes, I do think it's in danger of happening with the Republicans right now).

    Mike nailed it in his response above. The Tea Party movement should be a wake up call to the Republican leadership. Either they need to start doing their job or they'll find themselves out of one.
  • They want low taxes, and government programs galore.


    You're half right.
  • Mike_M
    I think the mistake is in assuming that the Tea Parties are an in-house Republican movement that just needs to be milked for cash and aimed at the Democrats.

    The Tea Parties are an expression of what everybody knows but is afraid to say: our political system is broken, and Big Government is a walking corpse.

    Examine the following numbers about the government, preferably independent of any attached opinon:
    1. Total debt
    2. Percent of budget spent on entitlements
    3. Personal income tax distribution
    4. Percent of budget that is deficit spending
    5. Growth of the money supply
    6. Comparitive business taxes between the US and other countries
    7. Liabilities on entitlements and debt

    Find each of those statistics then come back and explain how this country is not in deep, systemic, trouble.

    Both parties have had a shot to even begin to fix these issues, and both have made it worse with new entitlements, new spending, and endless pork (the polite word for corruption).

    The only question left is whether the country just sleepwalks into economic ruin or if we get leaders willing to break the fourth wall of politics, ring the warning bells, and do the business of getting the country back on track in an orderly fashion (and it's going to hurt regardless).

    Hoffman was a warning shot, and there will be more like him. 2010 will be critical in determinig whether we can reform the GOP or if it should be veiwed as the opposition. If conservatives can't get enough headway within the GOP to start turning the tide next year, I'm of the belief that a third party goes from being an obstacle to reform to a necessity.
  • happirick
    IMO, the most important thing that the tea party can do is push people to get involved locally with their local politics. It's already getting late for 2010. Push hard locally for real conservatives to challenge in the primaries. Get our own candidates running. This is another way of saying, get involved and help "take over" the Republican Party, starting at the local level.
  • The closest the Tea Party folks have come to major change based on donations was with the recent candidacy of Doug Hoffman in New York's 23rd and if you'll remember it was a failed effort.

    Didn't fail by much, and only failed because of the Republican Party's foolishness in choosing a leftist progressive who was further to the left than the Democrat for the office.

    With the Party's support from the getgo, the outcome WOULD have been different, and the Republicans would have gained some largely undeserved confidence for those Tea Partiers who think that taking over the Republican Party is the way to go.

    The Hoffman candidacy should be considered a wake-up call for everyone with an eye for our Nation's capitol: TheTea Party movement brought down Dede Scozzafava. It can bring the rest of you down with her.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • Please DO go back and actually read for comprehension if you are able. I did NOT say the Tea Parties were a mistake. I said that the mistake will LIKELY be that we won't take advantage of the energy in the movement and it will be frittered away and become useless. The mistake will be not recognizing how important the movement can be for us.

    The aforementioned platform would go a long way in not only taking advantage of the energy in the movement, but would also help develop a unity of purpose and actually bring about an INCREASE in that energy.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • The FACT is the Whig Party was never a strong party and only existed because of the vacuum of a real, viable second party able to face the Democrats.

    The same can be said of the Republicans today.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • You have NO IDEA what the tea party movement is about do you?

    Anyone who would make a statement like that truly has no clue at all what the Tea Party movement is about.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • This is the platform I mentioned above:

    http://friendsofneofederalism.blogspot.com/2008...

    This is the sketch I referred to from "The Electric Company":

    http://rightwingrocker.blogspot.com/2009/12/par...

    This is the post about who the real RINOs are (us):

    http://rightwingrocker.blogspot.com/2009/10/rwr...

    Hopefully I can get these through without any problems form the peanut gallery.

    RWR
  • Links don't work here anymore?

    What the hell is up with Hawk's webmasters?

    Sheesh. I could do a better job of it.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • If I am faced with voting for a Tea Party representative, a RINO (because there are no Conservative Republicans left -- at least ones with a backbone) or a liberal, I will vote for the Tea Party person. Voting for any of the remaining group of persons is like voting for one in the same!
    Posted by BRwoman


    The Republicans have never really been the party of the Constitution. At least not in my lifetime. They've merely been the party of what I call "capitalist progressivism", which isn't much better than "communist progressivism", "socialist progressivism", or "fascist progressivism" (some combination of which is what our current administration is delivering). We Tea Partiers are trying to force those in Washington to REJECT PROGRESSIVISM. This sketch from "The Electric Company" sums it up pretty well. Truth be told, WE have been the ones that have been "Republican In Name Only" all along. WE are the ones who have tried for so long to get the party to be something more appropriate, only to have our efforts rejected and ridiculed by the Party at every turn.

    In reality, WE are the RINOs, McCain et. al. are the mainstream Republicans. We can try to take over the Republican Party if we like, but we must keep in mind that we cannot "take back" what we truly never had to begin with.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • The biggest mistake Tea partiers can make is to allow Republicans to convince us that voting for their guy, regardless of how stupid an idea it is (e.g. McCain 2008), is the way to go.

    Our movement has more support now than the Republican Party itself does. The Republicans would be wise to follow us or get out of the way.

    Here's a little advice for the Republicans:

    Adopt this platform and make sure all of your candidates stand by it. THIS is what the Tea Party movement is about.

    You want us, our money, and our votes? Stand and be counted as supporting what we stand for.

    Nothing less will do.

    RWR
    www.rightwingrocker.com
  • I enjoyed your "history" pvt_Jones (sorry had to demote you for you badly garbled attempt).

    First of all the Whigs were not around in "good ol' 1776. In fact, neither party that WAS around in "good ol' 1776" are around now. (the fact that you tried to correct your mistake in another post does not console)

    The FACT is the Whig Party was never a strong party and only existed because of the vacuum of a real, viable second party able to face the Democrats. The slavery issue did not "fragment" the Whigs because it was there from day one. The Whigs were "fragmented" before they even began. You act as if the issues that killed the party came at a later date. It did not. The Whigs were never anything but a temporary, loose, and fragile coalition.

    But your somewhat flawed sense of history aside, what is most interesting about your reply here is that it has precisely NOTHING to do with my post above. There was no discussion of third parties in it so where your off topic rant comes from is anybodies guess.

    Lastly, it is obvious that you did not in any way understand the article posted because of the way you began your wrong-headed reply: "Suuuurrrrrre it's a mistake"

    Please DO go back and actually read for comprehension if you are able. I did NOT say the Tea Parties were a mistake. I said that the mistake will LIKELY be that we won't take advantage of the energy in the movement and it will be frittered away and become useless. The mistake will be not recognizing how important the movement can be for us.

    Next time you comment, try actually reading the whole piece and not just a title that you misconstrue.
  • SGT_Jones
    I know, I know - the Whigs were 1833-1856...
  • SGT_Jones
    Suuuurrrrrre it's a mistake... I thought we conservatives were the ones who studied history...I could be wrong, though, based on the article above.

    Remember the Whig party? Why don't we still have Whigs in Congress the way it was in good 'ol 1776?

    Wait a minute, I remember - just like the current Republican party they got fragmented and were replaced with a more viable party. The issue that fragmented the Whigs was states rights/abolition, the issue that is fragmenting and will destroy the Republican party if they don't address it is the expansion of the federal government. If it does, the leadership deserves it, because millions of Americans have been trying to send the message for the last year.

    There may be Reagan Republicans left, but they don't control the party. The people who do control the party are pushing a political agenda which is antithetical to conservative values ("immigration reform", bailouts, supporting candidates who advocate socialist economic policies). The Republicans are in real danger of being supplanted by a third party. That third party may get it's tail kicked for a few election cycles, but the Tea Party could be the start of a new, better conservative movement. In the long term the base wins.

    If the Republicans go the way of the Whigs it will be because they lost touch with their values, and without those values they have no moral authority to govern, in any case.
  • han_solo
    >They want low taxes, and government programs galore.

    You have NO IDEA what the tea party movement is about do you?
  • KingRandor82
    The Tea Party movement is really just a repeat of the past, and there's a reason for it. As mentioned, it's a movement based on opposition, with no real backbone ideas to back it up.

    Here's the simple fact: Americans want a non-existent "third option", and believe in voodoo economics. They really have no basic understanding of Economics 101.

    They want low taxes, and government programs galore.

    They obviously haven't learned a single thing in this past year other than "I guess Obama is sorta a bit like Carter".

    If Americans can barely figure this out even at this point, how do you honestly expect anyone else to ever figure it out?

    Humans have been doing this since Day 1, and I expect nothing to change...I'm not bothered by it, because it's really nothing new, simply "business as usual".

    Two things to understand:

    1. Ya might want to read up on the 48 Laws of Power. Believe me, they apply. It is how society works; not how it should, but how it does.

    2. Whoever has the gold makes the rules. It all comes down to the benjamins; it really is that simple.

    And no, I'm not bashing rich people...I want to be in that income bracket at some point myself.
  • BRwoman
    If I am faced with voting for a Tea Party representative, a RINO (because there are no Conservative Republicans left -- at least ones with a backbone) or a liberal, I will vote for the Tea Party person. Voting for any of the remaining group of persons is like voting for one in the same!
  • ... and come on... who CAN'T love my baby new year image I photoshopped together?? Huh?
  • D-Vega
    Though I don't agree with all of it, this is actually a very good post.
  • Whitehorse
    Good analysis & something we should work to fix. If we look back to 1994, we had a similar grassroots movement which only had a titular leader in Newt. After we won & the new representatives & senators took their oaths, the fire went to a slow smolder & the MSM was able to set the agenda again. The fire was all but extinguished in 1996 with the nomination of Bob Dole - a patriot & US hero, but a horrible candidate.

    I think we need to use the tools we have within the new media to keep the fire burning & work to nominate a strong, authentic conservative Republican in 2012. We have many from the TEA parties who haven't been part of the Republican base who are ready to become part, if we'll welcome them in...
  • WildPointer
    Who doesn't love that Sarah Palin ran three of her own party's senators out of office because they were corrupt? And when she felt the govenor was corrupt well then she ran against him on his own party ticket and took his office away too? This is why the left fears her so much. Why do you think they cannot stop mocking her and making fun of her. They Fear Her. And they should.
  • Good point Friedman. Most movements do have some kind of leader, but the Tea Parties actually do not. If anything it is a movement to create better leaders.

    I don't think one could have a leader of the Tea Party movement. It is too diverse and comprises of people across all political spectrum.
  • President_Friedman
    "Every transformative movement has been led by a single man and his small group of powerful adherents..."

    I guess I never expected the Tea Party movement to be transformative in and of itself, but instead I see it as the best vehicle for planting seeds in our government that could eventually cause tranformation. I've said from the beginning that if the movement can manage to get a handful of principaled conservatives elected (and by handful I mean 3 or 4), then the Tea Party will have been a massive success.

    It's what happens AFTER you have a few principaled conservatives in place that matters. Until they have had the chance to test and display their integrity in office, they can't rightfully call themselves leaders.

    The Tea Party is not a movement that needs a leader, it is a movement that needs to find and develop future leaders.
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