Class as a way of understanding Christine O鈥橠onnell and the tea party
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Following her tea party-fueled victory in Delaware鈥檚 GOP senate primary this past week, Christine O鈥橠onnell has soared to national prominence faster than you can say 鈥Sarah Palin.鈥 In fact, many are likening O鈥橠onnell to the mama grizzly herself.
Let us count the ways:
鈥 A folksy style that laughs off her party鈥檚 hierarchy. (We鈥檙e talking about you, Karl Rove).
鈥 A working class background to be proud of. (She may not be able to gut a moose, but she probably changes the oil in her car.)
鈥 A certain kind of femininity attractive to both men and women. (In a Daily Beast column headlined 鈥淲atch Your Back, Sarah,鈥 Bloomberg鈥檚 Margaret Carlson warns Palin 鈥渘ot to be upstaged by the new It Girl on the block.鈥)
鈥 A stick-to-her-guns attitude. (Addressing the conservative 海角大神 Voter Summit in Washington Friday, O鈥橠onnell resuscitated the 鈥渄eath panel鈥 charge against health care reform.)
鈥 A meteoric rise in media attention. (She鈥檒l be on two of the most prominent Sunday TV talk shows.)
鈥 And a tendency to colorful rhetorical flourishes like, 鈥淚 can see Pennsylvania from Delaware.鈥 (OK, we made that up.)
Liberals and Democrats are dredging up O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 checkered past 鈥 not hard to do, since establishment Republicans already had done that in promoting US Rep. Mike Castle for the senate post. One who is not doing that is Chris Coons, O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 Democratic opponent in the race.
鈥淚 don't think [voters are] particularly interested in statements that either of us made 20 or 30 years ago,鈥 he said at a candidates鈥 forum Thursday. (Probably just as well. As a college student, Coons wrote an article titled 鈥淐hris Coons: The Making of a Bearded Marxist.鈥)
鈥淚 thank you for that gentlemanly approach,鈥 O鈥橠onnell replied.
Republicans love to tar Democrats with waging 鈥渃lass warfare鈥 on things like the federal minimum wage and whose taxes to cut.
But some observers are beginning to see class as an issue within the GOP itself as it struggles to balance its traditional view of who should be in the club with the tea party insurgency that has notched significant wins over establishment Republican candidates in this year鈥檚 primary elections.
In a thoughtful and provocative column in Salon, .
鈥淭here are some reactions to the Tea Party movement coming from many different directions 鈥 illustrated by the patronizing mockery of Christine O'Donnell 鈥 which I find quite misguided, revealingly condescending, and somewhat obnoxious,鈥 he writes, referring to O鈥橠onnell critics of both parties.
鈥淢uch of the patronizing derision and scorn heaped on people like Christine O'Donnell have very little to do with their substantive views 鈥 since when did right-wing extremism place one beyond the pale? 鈥 and much more to do with the fact they're so 鈥 unruly and unwashed,鈥 Greenwald continues. 鈥淭o members of the establishment and the ruling class (like Rove), these are the kinds of people 鈥 who struggle with tuition bills and have their homes foreclosed 鈥 who belong in Walmarts, community colleges, low-paying jobs, and voting booths on command, not in the august United States Senate.鈥
Greenwald observes that Bill Clinton drew the same kind of criticism when he came to Washington. Even though he鈥檇 been educated at Yale and Oxford, Clinton had been raised by a working-class single mother, and he 鈥渆xuded all sorts of cultural signifiers perceived as uncouth.鈥
鈥淚'm not defending Palin or O'Donnell; they both hold views, most views, which I find repellent,鈥 Greenwald writes. 鈥淏ut it's hard not to notice the double standard which treats quite respectfully many politicians with the right lineage who espouse views every bit as radical. This is the kind of condescension that causes Sarah Palin's anti-elitism screeds to resonate and to channel genuine resentments.鈥
Americans like to think of themselves as living in a classless society. That鈥檚 one reason we revolted in the first place. But that鈥檚 never been true, whether one is a Democrat or a Republican. And the reaction to the tea parties 鈥 there are many of them 鈥 is proving that.