Tea Party at the Crossroads: Part II
In opposing
ObamaCare, the Tea Party took a position that increasing numbers of Americans
agree with, now that ObamaCare's potential for disaster is becoming clearer by
the day. But in trying to defund ObamaCare without the Congressional votes to
do so, the Tea Party made a major tactical mistake.
Polls show that
this mistake has already hurt the Republican Party, the only party that has any
chance of repealing ObamaCare. To have any realistic prospect of repealing
ObamaCare may require the Republicans to win both the 2014 and 2016 elections.
The Tea Party's
failed and foredoomed defunding effort predictably got the Republicans blamed
for shutting down the government. The fact that the Democrats also went down in
the polls means nothing. Politics is a zero-sum game. If it hurts the
Republicans more, that helps the Democrats.
Some defend the
futile attempt to defund ObamaCare on grounds that it is much harder to repeal
a law after it has gone into operation. That may often be true -- but not
always.
Prohibition was
repealed -- and it was a Constitutional Amendment, not just a piece of
legislation. Prohibition could not be repealed by Congress alone, but required
state legislatures to vote for repeal as well. Like ObamaCare, Prohibition
sounded good to a lot of people before it went into effect. Only after they saw
what a disaster it was in practice did people change their minds.
We are already
seeing people changing their minds about ObamaCare, after they experienced the
multiple disasters that are just starting to emerge. That includes
Congressional Democrats who had voted for it.
If mistakes
were always fatal, the human race would have become extinct long ago. So the
fact that the Tea Party made a tactical misjudgment is not the end of the
world. Everything depends on whether you learn from your mistake or refuse to
admit that it was a mistake, even to yourself -- which is often the biggest
mistake of all.
Barack Obama is
currently giving a free demonstration of how refusing to admit your mistake can
cost you public support, and even undermine your support within your own party.
The Tea Party
does not need to repeat the same mistake that Obama has made -- especially
since their principles are the opposite of his. The Tea Party is for protecting
individual freedom from the ever growing, and ever more intrusive, power of
government.
Friend and foe
alike see the Tea Party as not just a bunch of politicians trying to stay in
office, but people with a purpose beyond going along to get along. The left's
desperate -- and dishonest -- efforts to discredit the Tea Party show that they
understand its threat to their expanding government agenda.
The question is
whether the Tea Party itself still has its eye on the ball -- the goals it was
formed to serve -- or is letting itself get preoccupied with its battle against
other Republicans.
Heaven knows
there are Republicans who deserve criticism. But neither fervor nor ego can
justify wholesale challenges to Republican incumbents in next year's primary
elections. The end result of such a self-indulgence is likely to be getting
more Democrats elected, making repeal of ObamaCare virtually impossible. We can
only hope that this is not what the Tea Party has in mind, not only for their
sake, but for the sake of the country.
A haunting
example from history was the doctrinaire wing of the abolitionists, who ran
their own presidential candidate in the 1860 elections, even though he had no
chance of winning, and simply split the anti-slavery vote, so that Abraham
Lincoln got just 40 percent of the popular vote when he won in a crowded field.
The
doctrinaires were willing to risk a pro-slavery candidate being elected
President of the United States at a critical juncture in history, which would
have condemned millions of human beings to more decades, or perhaps
generations, in slavery.
Whatever your
principles, you have to weigh human consequences from whatever you do in the
name of those principles.
There are
millions of Americans today who are losing their insurance and their doctor --
and who may also lose everything financially to identity thieves, if ObamaCare
is as careless with their private information as early reports indicate. These
Americans are infinitely more important than internal battles among
Republicans.
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