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2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumDonald Trump and the Tea Party myth: Why the GOP is now an identity movement, not a political party
If Tea Party conservatives actually cared about spending, they'd rip apart Trump's big government ideasSEAN ILLING
In 2009, shortly after America elected its first African-American president, the Tea Party was born. The movement was sold as a grassroots explosion of conservatism. Middle America had had enough. Big government spending was out of control. The debt was a national crisis. We were bankrupting future generations of Americans. That none of these people were troubled by the previous 8 years under George W. Bush was more than a little suspicious. After all, it was Bush who dumped trillions of dollars into unwinnable wars. It was Bush who added nearly $6 trillion to the debt. It was Bush that signed the first bank bailout.
But when Obama was elected, fiscal conservatives found religion.
It was always clear the Tea Party had nothing to do with policy or ideology. It wasnt about spending or ObamaCare care or entitlements or state tyranny. This was a myth propagated by the silent financiers of the movement. The Tea Party was mobilized by the groups Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Works, both of which were financed by the Koch brothers. Indeed, these groups were formerly a single organization called Citizens for a Sound Economy, which was founded in 1984 by the Kochs.
The Kochs created the first national website for the Tea Party and used the group to promote their Randian free market fetishism. But the movement itself had almost nothing to do with economics. On the ground, it was obvious this was about something broader, more fundamental. These were mostly white people (89 percent, in fact) reacting against cultural change. 75 percent of Tea Partiers were 45 years old or older, and 60 percent were men. They were united by a nebulous cocktail of ethnocentrism and white nationalism. A black man was president and they suddenly wanted to Take the country back.
-snip-
http://www.salon.com/2016/08/05/donald-trump-and-the-tea-party-myth-why-the-gop-is-now-an-identity-movement-not-a-political-party/
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Donald Trump and the Tea Party myth: Why the GOP is now an identity movement, not a political party (Original Post)
DonViejo
Aug 2016
OP
+1, if the TP was started because of fiscal ideals they'd be loving Obama now
uponit7771
Aug 2016
#1
uponit7771
(90,347 posts)1. +1, if the TP was started because of fiscal ideals they'd be loving Obama now
pampango
(24,692 posts)2. "Last year, Donald Trump read the political winds and set sail on this sea of cultural angst."
Trumps nomination has brought the GOPs race problem to a head. The Tea Party is the Republican Party. The fringe is now the base, and the base is neither conservative nor ideological. As I noted Thursday, political science research shows that Republicans, despite being more likely to hold racist beliefs, have rarely voted on the basis of those beliefs not consciously in any case. But that changed with Trump. Racial enmity appears to be the motivating factor among his supporters. The only other comparably strong predictor of Trump support is anti-Muslim attitudes. There is, in other words, no pretense of conservatism. Trump voters are impelled by race and nativism.
If Trump wasnt riding this wave of racial resentment, I suspect wed hear a lot more about his protectionism. But the base hardly noticed it. They dont care about free trade any more than they do limited government, which is to say they dont care about conservatism. Trump may be ideologically incoherent, but hes signaled that hes with his supporters on the cardinal issue racial identity. Everything else is noise.
pamela
(3,469 posts)3. The alt-right has taken over the GOP
The Galt-right thought they were pulling the strings but it was the other way around. They are a full blown white identity party and we need to make them own it.