"Can't never could," my father always told me. If you tell
yourself you can't do something, that's a pretty good
guarantee you won't do something.
Because I've extensively covered the Tea Party movement -- and
actually spoken at three Tea Party events -- people
often ask me what it's all about. Perhaps the best
answer is that a lot of people who once thought they couldn't do
anything about politics have been persuaded that they can.
Richard Viguerie writes at American Thinker:
Rasmussen reports that the Tea Party Movement, which percolated
only months ago, is beating the Grand Old Party.
That's amazing -- a nascent grassroots movement is more popular
than a long-established political party -- and it's good
news.
Republican Party leaders should be embarrassed. Instead, the
Republican establishment disdains this populist uprising. . .
.
What's driving the Tea Party phenomenon? Robert
Stacy McCain writes at American Spectator about
one tea partier, Rhonda Lee Welsch, who says, "'It's a systemic
problem,' discussing the top-down approach of leaders in
both parties who seem indifferent to the concerns of ordinary
Americans." . . . (Emphasis added.)
Why does political leadership so easily succumb to this
indifference? In part because leaders become isolated in centers
of power, surrounded by sycophants who seek to advance their
personal ambitions through flattery ("You're doing a great
job, boss!") while constantly besieged by wealthy
interests seeking to influence policy.
During the Bush years, and especially in the
immediate aftermath of the 2004 election, when it
seemed that Karl Rove's "permanent Republican majority" had
become a reality, those much ballyhooed "values
volters" went home and told themselves they'd done their job.
The Republicans they'd elected told themselves that they could do
anything they wanted -- including amnesty
for illegal aliens -- and still win re-election.
The Republican leaders would lead, and the Republican followers
would follow -- or so the leaders imagined, until the
back-to-back electoral disasters of 2006 and 2008. Those
disasters caught the GOP elite by surprise and, as usual,
they tried to blame their blunders on scapegoats,
including Sarah Palin ("Stickin'
With the Hockey Mom," American Spectator, Oct. 31,
2008) and the conservative grassroots who are the heart and
soul of the Republican Party ("You
Did Not Lose," American Spectator, Nov. 5,
2008).
A few weeks ago, I had a long conversation with a liberal
journalist who asked me, "Who do you see as the leader of the
conservative movement?" I didn't have an answer, but Richard
Viguerie is onto something when he emphasizes the "leaderless"
quality of the Tea Party grassroots, quoting a historical study
of the Apaches: "You wanted to follow Geronimo? You followed
Geronimo. You didn't want to follow him? Then you didn't. The
power lay with each individual."
Viguerie comments:
From the tea parties, the grassroots, and the alternative
media, we are seeing new leaders emerge. Like our Founders,
they understand that their strength of leadership does not come
from a political party, but from consent of the governed. That
is why they don't hitch their wagons to one person or one
party.
Talk radio host Mark "The Great One"
Levin discussed recently how Reagan spoke not of "his"
administration, but of "this" administration. Levin noted how
Reagan understood his power came from the people, not from the
office he held.
Elitists
who disparage the Tea Party movement have argued that such
chaotic populism is un-Reaganesque, portraying the Gipper's
triumph as primarily the work of intellectuals and policy
specialists. Perhaps you should ask Viguerie and Levin
about that. Better yet, ask
Craig Shirley, whose new book Rendezvous
With Destiny chronicles in fascinating detail the 1980
campaign that elected Reagan.
You don't hear Craig Shirley dissing the Tea Party people, do
you? No, nor will you. Elitists who think that only pundits,
policy "experts" and think-tank wonks should
have a say in the political process are, in fact, the
antithesis of what the Reagan Revolution was about.
Rhonda
Lee Welsch has a vision: Thousands of bikers on Harleys,
rallying for
freedom in Daytona Beach in February, and then roaring into
Washington later next year. If you think a rowdy bunch
of Harley riders can't make a difference . . . Well,
can't never could.