Tea Party at the Crossroads
More important,
the Tea Party was an insurgent movement that was not trying to impose some
untried Utopia, but to restore the lost heritage of America that had been
eroded, undermined or just plain sold out by professional politicians.
What the Tea
Party was attempting was conservative, but it was also insurgent -- if not
radical -- in the sense of opposing the root assumptions behind the dominant
political trends of our times. Since those trends have included the erosion, if
not the dismantling, of the Constitutional safeguards of American freedom, what
the Tea Party was attempting was long overdue.
ObamaCare
epitomized those trends, since its fundamental premise was that the federal
government had the right to order individual Americans to buy what the
government wanted them to buy, whether they wanted to or not, based on the
assumption that Washington elites know what is good for us better than we know
ourselves.
The Tea Party's
principles were clear. But their tactics can only be judged by the
consequences.
Since the Tea
Party sees itself as the conservative wing of the Republican Party, its
supporters might want to consider what was said by an iconic conservative
figure of the past, Edmund Burke: "Preserving my principles unshaken, I
reserve my activity for rational endeavors."
Fundamentally,
"rational" means the ability to make a ratio -- that is, to weigh one
thing against another. Burke makes a key distinction between believing in a
principle and weighing the likely consequences of taking a particular action to
advance that principle.
There is no
question that the principles of anyone who believes in the freedom of American
citizens from arbitrary government dictates like ObamaCare -- unauthorized by
anything in the Constitution and forbidden by the 10th Amendment -- must oppose
this quantum leap forward in the expansion of the power of government.
There is
nothing ambiguous about the principle. The only question is about the tactics,
the Tea Party's attempt to defund ObamaCare. The principle would justify
repealing ObamaCare. So the only reason for the Tea Partyers' limiting
themselves to trying to defund this year was a recognition that repealing it
was not within their power.
The only
question then is: was defunding ObamaCare within their power? Most people
outside the Tea Party recognized that defunding ObamaCare was also beyond their
power -- and events confirmed that.
It was
virtually inconceivable from the outset that the Tea Party could force the
Democrats who controlled the Senate to pass the defunding bill, even if the Tea
Party had the complete support of all Republican Senators -- much less pass it
with a majority large enough to override President Obama's certain veto.
Therefore was
the Tea Party-led attempt to defund ObamaCare something that met Burke's
standard of a "rational endeavor"?
With the
chances of making a dent in ObamaCare by trying to defund it being virtually
zero, and the Republican Party's chances of gaining power in either the 2014 or
2016 elections being reduced by the public's backlash against that futile
attempt, there was virtually nothing to gain politically and much to lose.
However
difficult it might be to repeal ObamaCare after it gets up and running, the
odds against repeal, after the 2014 and 2016 elections, are certainly no worse
than the odds against defunding it in 2013. Winning those elections would
improve the odds.
If the Tea
Party made a tactical mistake, that is not necessarily fatal in politics.
People can even learn from their mistakes -- but only if they admit to
themselves that they were mistaken. Whether the Tea Party can do that may
determine not only its fate but the fate of an America that still needs the
principles that brought Tea Party members together in the first place.
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