Does 'tea party' populism verge into extremism?
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Evidence of growing ties between the quasi-libertarian 鈥渢ea party鈥 movement and supremacist 鈥減atriot鈥 groups has the blogosphere all-a-Twitter after The New York Times ran on the topic Tuesday, datelined rural Idaho.
Judging by scorn heaped on the article from both the and the , NYT investigative reporter David Barstow may well have hit the issue pretty squarely on the head.
鈥淭he Tea Party movement has become a platform for conservative populist discontent, a force in Republican politics for revival 鈥 [b]ut it is also about the profound private transformation of 鈥 people who not long ago were not especially interested in politics, yet now say they are bracing for tyranny,鈥 Mr. Barstow wrote.
Hints of racism and extremism
While painting the tea party movement as embodying angst and displeasure at Washington, the story also hints at charges of racism and extremism that trouble 鈥 and, frankly, scare 鈥 some Americans.
The article gives rise to questions about the true nature of the movement: Is it racist? Violent? Xenophobic?
At the end of the day, the philosophical diversity of the tea party movement makes those questions nearly impossible to pin down, many political experts say.
Fox News host Bill O鈥橰eilly flatly 鈥渘uts,鈥 鈥渃razy鈥 and 鈥渏ust loons,鈥 before putting the number of extremists in the movement at 10 percent.
But, Mr. O鈥橰eilly pointed out, 鈥淓very group has that.鈥
Largely a middle-class movement
The fact is, most of those who have been to actual tea party protests report that it鈥檚 largely a decentralized, middle-class movement focused chiefly on taxes, deficits, and the nature of representation in Washington. (A new finds that tea party activists tend to be male, rural, upscale, and overwhelmingly conservative.)
鈥淲e have traditionally been the people that pay the bills and vote on Election Day but have sat back and been involved in other things rather than politics,鈥 activist Phillip Dennis recently.
To be sure, many in the movement take the bad with the good.
鈥淵es, the feelings, thoughts, and opinions of Tea Party patriots are all over the place,鈥 tea party activist Lloyd Marcus at American Thinker. 鈥淲hat a mess! Well, I say, how wonderful!"
Despite recent successes, the tea party movement is likely to suffer if middle America sees it as a violent rebellion looming in the wings.
Can activists identify rogue elements?
One test is whether tea party activists are willing, or able, to identify rogue elements. That won鈥檛 be easy to do given the decentralized nature of the movement.
But reports like Barstow鈥檚 in The New York Times also run the risk of making it too easy for Democrats to make the same mistake they made before Scott Brown鈥檚 election to the US Senate in Massachusetts: discounting, dismissing, or even ridiculing the power of a populist movement that, though it may be confounding to national observers, is working quietly in local and state elections to vet and support Constitution-minded politicians.
鈥淲ith ordinary Americans setting out to reclaim the political process, it鈥檚 likely to be a bumpy ride for incumbents of both parties,鈥 Instapundit blogger Glenn Reynolds in a recent Wall Street Journal column. 鈥淚 suspect the Founding Fathers would approve.鈥
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