Look at America's Geography Shows That the Tea Party Is Doomed
November 29, 2011 |
When
2011 began, the Tea Party movement had reason to think it had seized
control of Maine. Their candidate, Paul LePage, the manager of a chain
of scrappy surplus-and-salvage stores, had won the governor’s mansion on
a promise to slash taxes, regulations, spending, and social services.
Republicans had captured both houses of the state legislature for the
first time in decades, to the surprise of the party’s leaders
themselves. Tea Party sympathizers had taken over the GOP state
convention, rewriting the party’s platform to demand the closure of the
borders, the elimination of the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Department
of Education, a prohibition on stimulus spending, a “return to the
principles of Austrian Economics,” and a prohibition on “any
participation in efforts to create a one world government.” A land
developer had been put in charge of environmental protection, a Tea
Party activist was made economic development chief, and corporate
lobbyists served as the governor’s key advisers. A northern New England
state’s rather liberal Democrats and notoriously moderate Republican
establishment had been vanquished.
Or so they thought.
Less
than a year later, it’s Maine’s Tea Party that’s on the wane. Prone to
temper tantrums and the airing of groundless accusations, Governor
LePage—who won office by less than two points in a five-way race, with
just 38 percent of the vote—quickly alienated the state party chair and
GOP legislative leadership. His populist credentials were damaged when
it was revealed that much of his legislative agenda— including a widely
condemned proposal to roll all state environmental laws back to weak
federal baselines—had been literally cut and pasted from memos sent to
his office by favored companies, industrial interests, or their
lobbyists. His economic development commissioner was forced to step down
after allegedly insulting several (previously friendly) audiences,
while a court ruled that his environmental protection nominee violated
conflict-of-interest provisions. He triggered international media
coverage, a lawsuit, and large protests after removing a mural depicting
the history of Maine’s labor movement from the Department of Labor
because an anonymous constituent compared it to North Korean
“brainwashing.” Eight of twenty GOP state senators blasted the
governor’s bellicose behavior in an op-ed carried in the state’s
newspapers, the largest of which declared in April that “the LePage era
is over.” Power in the state’s diminutive capital, Augusta, now resides
with the senate president, a Republican moderate who was Senator Olympia
Snowe’s longtime chief of staff.
The
Tea Party itself has been all but destroyed in Maine by its association
with the debt ceiling hostage takers in Washington, according to Andrew
Ian Dodge, founder of the organization Maine Tea Party Patriots and the
state movement’s most high-profile activist. “There were people saying,
‘Yes, I think we should default,’ and there were the rest of us saying,
‘You’re insane,’ ” says Dodge, a dark-horse challenger to Snowe. “Now
I’m emphasizing my Tea Party links even less because a lot of people
think they are the crazy people who almost drove us off a cliff.”
Indeed,
in much of the northern tier of the country, the Tea Party has seen a
similar reversal of fortune. Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker—who won by
just 6 percent— has faced powerful resistance to his deregulatory,
antiunion, antigovernment agenda, including the recall of two of his
senatorial allies; his political future is uncertain. In Massachusetts,
Tea Party-backed Senator Scott Brown has emerged as a moderate Yankee
Republican along the lines of Snowe. In New Hampshire, Tea Party
organizer Jack Kimball stepped down as state party chair this September
after losing the confidence of the state’s leading Republicans. “This is
the establishment Republicans versus the Tea Party that helped get them
into office,’’ one angry Tea Party activist said of Kimball’s
departure. “They rode us in, now they’re bringing us back to the barn.’’
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