The Tea Party's Retreaded "Ideas"

This item is cross-posted from Progressive Fix.

Posted by Ed Kilgore on

March 5, 2010 02:09 PM

http://www.thedemocraticstrategist.org/strategist/2010/03/the_tea_partys_retreaded_ideas.php

For all the talk about the Tea Party Movement and its demands
that America's political system be turned upside down, it's
always been a bit hard to get a fix on what, exactly, these
conservative activists want Washington to do.

To solve this puzzle, it's worth taking a look at the
Contract From America process - a project of the Tea Party
Patriots organization, designed to create a bottoms-up, open-
source agenda that activists can embrace when they gather for
their next big moment in the national media sun on April 15.
The 21-point agenda laid out for Tea Partiers to refine into
a 10-point 'Contract' is, to put it mildly, a major Blast
from the Past, featuring conservative Republican chestnuts
dating back decades.

There's term limits, naturally. There are a couple of
'transparency' proposals, such as publication of bill texts
well before votes. But more prominent are fiscal 'ideas' very
long in the tooth. You got a balanced budget constitutional
amendment, which ain't happening and won't work. You got fair
tax/flat tax, the highly regressive concept flogged for many
years by a few talk radio wonks, that has never been taken
seriously even among congressional Republicans. You've got
Social Security and Medicare privatization (last tried by
George W. Bush in 2005) and education vouchers. You've got
scrapping all federal regulations, preempting state and local
regulations, and maybe abolishing some federal departments
(an idea last promoted by congressional Republicans in 1995).
You've got abolition of the 'death tax' (i.e., the tax on
very large inheritances). And you've got federal spending
caps, which won't actually roll back federal spending because
they can't be applied to entitlements.

My favorite on the list is a proposal that in Congress 'each
bill - identify the specific provision of the Constitution
that gives Congress the power to do what the bill does.' This
illustrates the obliviousness or hostility of Tea Partiers to
the long string of Supreme Court decisions, dating back to
the 1930s, that give Congress broad policymaking powers under
the 14th Amendment and the Spending and Commerce Clauses.
More broadly, it shows the literalism of Tea Party 'original
intent' views of the Constitution; if wasn't spelled out
explicitly by the Founders it's unconstitutional.

We are often told that the Tea Party Movement represents some
sort of disenfranchised 'radical middle' in America that
rejects both major parties' inability to get together and
solve problems. As the 'Contract From America' shows, that's
totally wrong. At least when it comes to policy proposals,
these folks are the hard-right wing of the Republican Party,
upset that Barry Goldwater's agenda from 1964 has never been
implemented.

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