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The Tea Party Challenges ‘Business as Usual’

The Tea Party has made an impact on political conversation, no matter your (or my) politics. I’ve written previously about them here.


I am quite ambivalent about the Tea Party.  While I am appalled by some of the slogans and signs that have appeared in Tea Party rallies, I am convinced that this is a genuine social movement, a politically significant instance of the politics of small things, a political movement concerned with fundamental principles, engaged in a great debate about both the pressing issues of the day and the enduring problems of American political life.  As a registered Democrat and as a strong supporter of President Obama and his program, I am pleased that the actions of the movement may have made the Republican landslide in the upcoming elections less momentous, as the talking heads are now speculating, although I am still concerned that the movement may have given wind to the rightward shift of public opinion.  The emotional, irrational and often purposely ignorant political expression in Tea Party demonstrations is of deep concern, but I think the strong expression of fundamental political principles can and should be seriously considered and confronted.  I am unsure about what the Tea Party Movement’s impact on American public life in the very near term, i.e. the midterm elections, and in the long term, i.e. in the reinvention of American political culture will be.  As I have been trying to sort this all out, I am reminded of the insights of an old friend, Alberto Melucci, an Italian sociologist who presciently understood the meaning of social movements in the age of internet and mobile communications, before these new media were common.

The Theoretical Perspective of a Friend

Alberto Melucci

In series of important books, Nomads of the Present: Social Movements and Individual Needs in Contemporary Society, Challenging Codes: Collective Action in the Information Age, and Playing the Self: Person and Meaning in the Planetary Society, Alberto explored what it means to become involved in a social movement in our times.  He understood that the means of social movements may be even more important than their ends, and that they make possible a new sense of self and self purpose for their participants to emerge.  Further and most significant politically, they can change the basic social codes.  Alberto was mostly thinking about progressive new social movements, feminism, environmentalism, gay rights and the like.  But I think his approach illuminates the new conservatism of the Tea Party quite well.  He died prematurely on September 12, 2001, not observing the strange turn in global politics since that very day.  But he would have understood the Tea Party, as a social movement concerned with primary values, unconcerned with electoral priorities, forging new, in this case, reactionary, identities and values, a movement that is very much a product and a challenge of our times.

Challenging Codes

The Tea Party Movement makes its participants feel good about themselves and gives them a sense of purpose, as the participants frequently report on movement blogs and to reporters.  The Movement seeks to “take our country back,” supporting and attacking politicians of both parties.  They have specific ends against bail outs and the government handouts to the undeserving, from the poor to the mighty banks and corporations of Wall Street and Detroit.  They are for limited government and the constitution, as they understand it.  They imagine together a new future based on an idealized past and in their movement they enact their future.

The movement activists and candidates sometime seem to hurt Republicans more than Democrats, an outcome that seems to be irrational given their own voting records, but this is not as significant to them as one would expect.  They are concerned about a vision of America between its past and its future and their place in this America, and worry that this vision to which they are deeply committed is being lost, taken away politically by politicians they revile, and overlooked by too many of their fellow citizens.  When the fundamental concern with the American code is kept in mind, the Tea Party Activists are not as irrational as most outside commentators, of the left and the right, think.

September versus November

Karl Rove got caught up in this Primary Night last Tuesday.   In an interview with Sean Hannity on Fox News, they agreed on fundamental conservative issues.  Nothing in their discussion suggested a questioning of the principles and practices of the Tea Party.  But Rove dared to frankly criticize the candidate who won her primary in Delaware due to Tea Party activism and support, Christine O’Donnell.  She was the candidate of true conviction against a moderate, but her odd behavior despite her stated purity would lead to electoral defeat.  “It does conservatives little good to support candidates who at the end of the day while they may be conservative in their public statements do not [evince] the characteristics of rectitude, truthfulness and sincerity and character that the voters are looking for.”  Rove maintained, frankly concluding that “This is not a race we’re going to be able to win.” (link)   For this assessment he was severely attacked by Rush Limbaugh, Sarah Palin, and the full staff of Fox News, forcing him to retreat from his initial assessment. (link)

Rove was caught between the calculation of a political analyst and of a political partisan.  Since he cares most about the politics of the day, he could not be content with pronounced conservative purity.   He, on the right, along with most objective and Democratic partisan observers, noted that the Tea Party victory in the Delaware primary greatly increased the Democrats chances of maintaining their Senate majority.

But those who seek to take their country back, those more interested in the long march of changing the political culture, changing the code of politics as Alberto Melucci would put it, would prefer resolute cultural battle (most prominently Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina, link).    Their movement is their message. For them the victory in September is more important than the increased chances of a defeat in November.

5 comments to The Tea Party Challenges ‘Business as Usual’

  • AJ

    The Tea Party’s goals are to make a complete change in the country’s political landscape. They are not interested in having the political say so of any of the current members of the government but want to completely rebuild Congress as well as the way that Congress operates. It becomes a scarier prospect when you take into account the fact that they are obviously not trying to win any kind of elections. For a group that brandishes assault weapons at not only their own rallies but other political events it creates a frightening image of what may happen if they are not able to achieve any of their goals. If their only goal is notirarity, as I think Palin’s only goal must be because she has so far polarized herself as to never have a shot at any kind of political office, then they are doing one hell of a job. For a group that is supported by just 19 percent of the American public they get much more press than they deserve. They may see themselves as early American revolutionaries who want to take the country by force instead of by election. If they take action on some of their political slogans, most notably Palin’s “Reload,” its not an election defeat that the country has to fear but the violent revolt of those who think that they are disenfranchised. Rove was correct in saying that it does conservatives little good to support these candidates but he could have gone farther than that, and all conservatives should, and recommended a complete split of the Grand Old Party from the terrible press and reactions that come from the Tea Party.

  • AJ, I agree with much that you write. I think that the Tea Party is made up of Reaganites gone wild, with guns, and a deep fear of people of color, especially those who have funny names. That said, I also think that they are principled Reagan Republicans. I agree that the way they conduct political debate is very dangerous. They imagine that they are the force of virtue and truth, with little respect for the factual reality (especially about history and the constitution) and that the people they oppose are not opponents but enemies. The Tea Party controlling Congress, even in Congress, is indeed a nightmare. All decent Republicans should distance themselves from the Tea Party, but they won’t because it has the energy they need, and they agree with the Tea Party’s avowed fundamental positions. But radicalism in the defense of hyper individualism and minimal government is indeed a vice and moderation in the pursuit of justice and a balanced budget is indeed a virtue (to turn Goldwater on his head, i.e. “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.”).

  • okay lets all be honest Glen beck chose this day because hes an attention addict and this would be the most controversial day to have a tea party rally on. Glen beck is a joke to me and so is the tea party movement. Both people/ groups annoy me.

  • Thank goodness! The dawn of judgement for the Dems is just about upon us! Finally, we conservatives get to steamroll that liberal train wreck that has made a big mess of things.

  • I was also misinformed about the tea party movement until I joined a great site that made me understand it better. I met many of friends on the site and must say I was impressed with the way they think. I thought they were all insane people then I discovered why they are the tea party movement. It is because they care about the United States and the constitution.

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