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The Tea Party: A Threat To Business as Usual

A new POLITICO poll reveals once again the fundamental disconnect between the ruling establishment and those that pay their salaries. 77% of D.C. elites don’t believe that tea party candidates will be able bring change to Washington.

It’s a predictable opinion considering they have a vested interest in the continued growth of the federal government. To bureaucrats, lobbyists and government contractors, we represent last call on a profligate spending bender. We are the hangover they dread in the coming morning.

The pessimistic response to the poll does nothing but verify that we are on the right track. The whole purpose of this movement was to make those profiting off irresponsible government spending so uncomfortable that they clean up or get out. These beneficiaries of the earmarks and backroom deals have a direct financial motivation to prevent the type of reform that is essential to restore fiscal sanity.

This may be why there is measurable discomfort when discussing whether or not gridlock will occur as a result of the midterm elections. Is gridlock a good thing? 46 percent of those polled outside the Beltway believe that it would occur, but just 29 percent believe that it could bring back the oversight and accountability necessary to restrain government.

The general public also seems less worried that divided government would grind Washington to a halt. Forty-six percent said that scenario would “allow each party to block the other and make it harder to get things done,” and 29 percent said having divided government would “set checks and balances so only fair decisions are made.”

A conservative takeover of Congress shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of gridlock, but as an opportunity for President Obama to either come to the middle, as Bill Clinton did after the 1994 Revolution, or continually veto the will of the American people.

Obama can make that choice, but don’t expect fiscal austerity to be embraced by Washington elites. They aren’t part of the 70 percent of Americans who agree with the main issues of the Tea Party movement. They reject the novel idea that reducing the national debt and reigning in government spending are practical measures for our country. Of course they feel threatened, it’s in their self-interest to keep us out.

COMMENTS

  • heir2freedom

    The One will never move towards the center. In his messianic, delusional mind, he truly believes God delivered him to this country to take a wrecking ball to the Constitution and institute a new pact with “We the People”.

    If you haven’t noticed, every one of his and the Progressive left’s policies have been laser-focussed on social justice and wealth redistribution. Of course they “have” to lie to the common rubes — that would be us — because a) in our small, not-touched-by-God brains we just are incapable of understanding why these laws/policies/massive bureaucracies are good for us, and 2) we’d rebel like hell.

    Thus, hello Tea Party.

    NEW POST:

    HOMELAND SECURITY UNVEILS NEW BORDER SECURITY STRATEGY: LOSE YOUR JOB!
    http://heir2freedom.blogspot.com/2010/10/homeland-security-unveils-new-border.html

  • http://www.thejoyofreason.com thejoyofreason

    Outstanding book so far. I’m about 1/3 through. Keep up the great work with Mr. Armey and the rest of FreedomWorks!

  • http://xmmlbchat.blogspot.com katesmith

    9/30/10, from The Atlantic, quote NY Mayor Mosque Mike Bloomberg about his golfing buddy, Obama: * “”One of the criticisms of President Obama that’s not fair is that he never said he would be any different than he is now.

    * He’s always been… pro-union,

    not particularly interested in business.”

    Bloomberg’s comments made at Washington Ideas Forum, per article. Bloomberg is still Obama’s buddy because on his 10/13 cover of Bloomberg Business Week he ran the headline, “Why bisiness doesn’t trust the Tea Party.” Bloomberg is heavily invested in global warming and campaigned for Mike Castle.

  • JadedByPolitics

    WE The People! you can call us the Country Class if you like I prefer to call us Americans! and I prefer to call them Socialists, so its all about GOTV now to SMACK the Political Class upside the head! (yes that is indeed violent imagery, if the President can use it so can I).

  • msctex

    Were they to admit that, they would need as well admit they are going to be part of that change. Better to deny the possibility, not lend it credence, and hope for the best.

  • http://audioblog.us neilmckenna

    “Business as usual,” in the person of the Wall Street fat cats who benefited from the financial bailouts that the so called tea party movement finds so objectionable, are the very ones financing the movement. They want to prevent the taxation of their exorbitant incomes, the revenue from which would help reduce the budget deficits about which the movement is rightly concerned.

    While good, honest and well intentioned tea partiers rally round to do their bidding, if the rich benefactors of your misguided efforts would be sitting back and laughing at you if they weren’t so busy pumping anonymous money into the upcoming election.

    You’re being chumped.

  • victrola

    I actually think when Republicans took control of Congress in 1994, they did what they promised, and passed much of the Contract With America. They balanced the budget, reformed welfare, cut taxes, etc. all with a Democrat President.

    I agree that a handful of Republicans lost their way over they years with some of the pork-barrel spending, but in retrospect, you’re talking about less than 1% of the budget. The real fiscal battleground is entitlements.

    The incoming class of Republicans will be even more conservative than ’94, my only fear is if the leadership can be effective.

  • proudmarinemom

    you’ll be going away soon.

  • chamberD

    The ruling elite have a vested interest in suppressing enthusiasm for fiscal sanity — this is why they project (through polls like these) the futility of our efforts (and how stupid are they not to know this is a WAR and we are unyielding?) to effect real reform.

    I’m not going to shut up. I’m not going to go away and go back to life as I once knew it. Hell no. I’m hollering from the rooftops, I’m talking in person when I get the opportunity to guests at events hosted by conservative groups, those guests who work in DC and DO talk to elected officials in the course of their jobs. I’m telling them to take this word back to the limp-wristed sissies on the Hill that I MEAN BUSINESS. I am their boss and I will not give in to SOCIALISM ——- EVER.

    First order of business is to REPEAL obamacare, even if it means CIVIL WAR.

  • victrola

    Sort of like Nancy Pelosi saying the insurance industry was behind all the ObamaCare protests.

    The conservative movement is not being dictated by Wall Street, they would much rather have business as usual. Look at where firms like Goldman Sachs donate money. It’s not to conservative candidates and groups.

    The Democrat Party is the one that’s being completely led over a cliff by interests groups.

  • blooch

    Just wondering.

    Impressive bio, BTW

  • makemyday

    around here, when casting aspersions like chaff, it behooves the caster of said chaff to link to, produce documentation, or state their case in a more succinct fashion.

    If you are half the person that your bio states you are (not a narcissus are we?) you should very ably follow up your chaff with substance. Lacking any of the aforementioned items, STFU.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens
  • proudmarinemom

    meant for the KoolAde Kid above, not you, Matt.

  • proudmarinemom

    however his name is not neilmckenna, but Ken McNeil. Or is it Kos McHuffington?

  • blooch

    You made mine…and you’ve got tomorrow covered, proudmarinemom.