'Tea party'-backed platform sails through Maine GOP convention
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| Portland, Maine
Conservative activists backed by 鈥渢ea party鈥 groups have rejected the Maine Republican Party鈥檚 proposed platform, replacing it with a document praising the tea-party movement and calling for a number of potentially radical changes, such as the sealing of borders.
An overwhelming majority of the 1,800 delegates at the party鈥檚 state convention passed the conservative platform Saturday. The move surprised many in the Maine GOP, which has a half-century reputation for moderation. The state鈥檚 two Republican US senators 鈥 Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins 鈥 are both considered moderates, as is their predecessor, Bill Cohen, who served in Bill Clinton鈥檚 cabinet.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e not a moderate, you don鈥檛 get elected in Maine,鈥 says political consultant Chris Potholm, a professor of government at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. 鈥淎ny candidate who gets nominated is going to ignore that platform, or he or she is going to lose.鈥
The development in Maine coincides with one in Utah, where the tea-party movement ousted Sen. Robert Bennett (R) at the state鈥檚 GOP nominating convention Saturday. Although Senator Bennett is generally considered a conservative, tea partyers had targeted him largely because of his 2008 vote in favor of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) for banks.
In Maine, the newly adopted GOP platform outlines various changes, although its ambiguous language leaves the meaning of many sections open to interpretation. There鈥檚 a call to restore 鈥淐onstitutional Law as the basis for the judiciary,鈥 to 鈥渞eassert the principle that 鈥楩reedom of Religion鈥 does not mean 鈥楩reedom from Religion,鈥 鈥 to 鈥渞eturn to the principles of Austrian Economics,鈥 and to remove 鈥渙bstacles created by government鈥 to the private development of natural gas, oil, coal, and nuclear power.
Other parts are clearer: a rejection of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, elimination of the US Department of Education and the Federal Reserve, and a freeze and prohibition on stimulus spending. Healthcare is 鈥渘ot a right鈥 but 鈥渁 service鈥 that can be addressed only by using 鈥渕arket based solutions.鈥
The wide acceptance of the platform at the convention surprised even its co-authors. 鈥淚 had no inkling this would pass, and frankly we鈥檇 been told as much by people running the convention,鈥 says co-author Steven Dyer, an evangelical youth pastor and vice chair of the Knox County Republican Committee, which sponsored the document. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 even make copies of it for the delegates. They just read it to them from the podium.鈥
Mr. Dyer says he and his co-authors aren鈥檛 members of the tea party, although some have attended such events. They were motivated by disappointment with the party鈥檚 鈥減rogressive鈥 wing, which had 鈥forgotten what it means to be a Republican,鈥 he says.
He agrees that the document is vague in parts, but that was because they had expected it to be merely a draft to begin negotiations with less-conservative party members. To their amazement, it passed with the support of not only tea-party groups, evangelical 海角大神s, and Ron Paul libertarians, but also a large number of presumably rank-and-file conventioneers.
State party chair Charles Webster denied that the platform represented a major change, saying it was just 鈥渕ore specific鈥 than past platforms. 鈥淭hese are things that Republicans believe, especially working-class people,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f it had been really controversial, it wouldn鈥檛 have passed.鈥
It will help Republican candidates get elected, he says, even though Maine has been becoming increasingly Democratic in recent years.
Democrats currently control the governor鈥檚 mansion, both houses of the state Legislature, and both US House seats. Barack Obama won 15 of 16 counties in the 2008 election. Democratic control of the Portland City Council is threatened not by Republicans, but by Greens.
Seven Republicans, four Democrats, and two independents are running to replace Gov. John Baldacci, who is term-limited.
鈥淚f I was a Republican, I鈥檇 be a little nervous about this. And if I was a Democrat, I鈥檇 be cautiously optimistic,鈥 says Mark Brewer, a political scientist at the University of Maine in Orono. He thinks that parts of the platform will play poorly with the general electorate in the gubernatorial race.
Professor Potholm played down the significance of the new platform, saying that candidates and voters will simply ignore it. 鈥淭he party鈥檚 moderate constituency hasn鈥檛 changed,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tempest in a teapot.鈥
But longtime Republican state legislator Peter Mills, a moderate gubernatorial candidate, says it鈥檚 a mistake to underestimate the sentiment that fuels the tea-party activists. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e very small, very vocal, and very intense, but they reflect a wider feeling of frustration, discontent, and lack of confidence in government,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he challenge is to be able to harness that anger and frustration and, once elected, convert it into significant change.鈥
Related:
Tea party movement ousts Sen. Bob Bennett in Utah
'Tea Party' eyes big prize: the 2010 midterm elections
Opinion: Tea Party activists: Do they hate liberals more than they love liberty?