海角大神

Monitor breakfast: Tea Party activists Dick Armey and Matt Kibbe talk next steps

After the campaigning, the governing. But will legislating split apart the Tea Party? Followers disagree on social issues such as abortion, admit Armey and Kibbe. But Tea Party enthusiasts unite on this: The government spends way too much.

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Michael Bonfigli/Special to 海角大神/File
Tea Party activists Matt Kibbe (l.) and Dick Armey (r.) at a Monitor breakfast with reporters Sept. 13. The two lead a group called FreedomWorks that supports lower taxes and smaller government.

Can the Tea Party movement鈥檚 self-proclaimed 鈥渂eautiful chaos鈥 generate enough order to actually legislate?

Because that鈥檚 what happens next. If enough candidates supported by the Tea Party win seats in Congress, then it鈥檚 time to spin rhetoric into action. As leading Tea Partiers Dick Armey and Matt Kibbe told reporters at a Monitor breakfast this morning, legislating must be the next step in the growth of the movement.

Let鈥檚 say that Tea Party candidates get a big enough 鈥渃adre,鈥 as Mr. Armey put it, to influence Republicans in Congress. Will they find the unity to effect change? Or will putting pen to paper require so much specificity that this loose movement dissipates, floating to the outer regions of the political cosmos like so many grassroots movements of the past?

Both men, who lead a small-government advocacy group called FreedomWorks, admit to great diversity of opinion 鈥 if not of race or age 鈥 among Tea Party followers. Armey listed a variety of enthusiasts: evangelicals, independents, libertarians, Democrats, Republicans.

They don鈥檛 agree on social issues such as abortion or prayer in schools. They don鈥檛 agree on foreign policy. 鈥淲e have all sorts of spirited arguments,鈥 says Armey.

They do unite, however, on this key fiscal issue: Federal government shouldn鈥檛 spend money that it doesn鈥檛 have. And, it should be small.

Even here, though, Armey, who was the Republican House majority leader from 1995-2003, is a realist. Here's his comment on would-be Republican speaker of the House John Boehner's hint that he might allow tax cuts for the wealthy to expire if he saw no other choice: 鈥淥ne of the first things in politics is to do what is doable.鈥

Neither did Armey hold out great hope for repealing 鈥Obamacare鈥 鈥 a key demand of Tea Partiers 鈥 as long as President Obama holds veto power in the Oval Office. Instead, he said, conservatives would have to fight for things like tort-reform to hold down medical costs.

It鈥檚 not that social issues won鈥檛 come up, Armey said. It鈥檚 just that they aren鈥檛 the priority at the moment.

It seems then, that the best hope for the Tea Party鈥檚 longevity is the longevity of American debt. That problem won鈥檛 be solved anytime soon.

But the details of how to reduce deficits and debt could also be as divisive as abortion. Armey says that the best that a Rebublican-led House might be able to do under Obama is to "stop the bleeding" by going back to pre-stimulus spending. That may not satisfy Tea Party supporters. When asked if there's a painless way to tackle debt, he suggested making Social Security and Medicare voluntary. I can hear the howls of protest already, including from Tea Party followers themselves.

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