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[big campaign] Huff Post from Creamer-Difference between Tea Party Extremists and R Leaders
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What’s the Difference Between Mainstream Republican Leaders and Tea Party
Extremists?
What’s the difference between mainstream Republican leaders and the Tea
Party extremists that have been winning Republican primaries across the
country?
The main difference is the willingness of the Tea Party gang to say what
they believe out loud. This, of course, is driving Republican political
consultants crazy. Republicans have never gotten elected by laying out to the
voters the core components of their economic agenda. When they have been
successful it has generally been by soft-pedaling or sugar-coating the
things that mattered most to their corporate backers and playing instead to the
fears and anxieties of their rank and file voters.
During his campaign for re-election in 2004, George Bush never uttered a
word about his plan to privatize Social Security, cut guaranteed benefits
and replace this massively popular retirement system with a risky investment
scheme that allowed Wall Street to get its hands on the Social Security
trust fund. But that was exactly his major policy initiative once he was
re-elected.
In the 2000 election, Bush didn’t focus his campaign on his plan to slash
the portion of taxes paid by the wealthiest two percent of Americans and
preside over a massive transfer of wealth from the middle class to the rich.
And he certainly didn’t explain the policy of pre-emptive war that resulted
in the trillion dollar foreign policy disaster in Iraq.
Nor, of course, did Bush campaign on the pledge that he would take the
long-term surplus in the federal budget he inherited from Clinton and turn it
into more debt, during his term, than all of the Presidents before him in
American history put together.
This year, the Republican establishment is not worried about the primary
victories of Tea Party candidates because they will advocate “far out”
extremists policies. Most of the Republican Party leadership agrees with
those policies. The problem is that these candidates don’t seem to have enough
sense – or political experience -- to know that they’re not supposed to
go around talking about those policies before they’re elected.
Take Ken Buck, the winner of the Republican primary for U.S. Senate in
Colorado. He has made it crystal clear that he simply does not believe in
Social Security. In fact he said that Social Security is “horrible policy.”
According to Politico, Buck told a right-wing audience last spring that ”I
don’t know that the federal government should be involved in a retirement
plan," adding that the very idea of social insurance is "fundamentally
against what I believe."
Now the actual content of this position is not really at variance with
true Republican orthodoxy. The Republican Party opposed Social Security when
it was founded seventy-five years ago, and fundamentally Republicans have
never supported the notion the Government should be running a pension
program. They believe in what President Bush referred to as the “ownership
society.” Basically that means that the “private market” should take care of
things, and that if you’re not tough enough or smart enough to make it by
yourself, you’re “on your own, buddy.”
When it comes to Social Security, Republicans have been trying to
privatize it and cut back benefits for three quarters of a century.
This year, they are particularly keen on taking action to cut back what
they call this “entitlement” because they don’t want the wealthy to have to
take a hit when it comes to closing the long-term structural deficit that
they created with their massive Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, and two costly
wars.
Republicans would much rather cut the pensions of middle class retirees –
to whom Social Security pays the princely average of $14,000 per year --
than they would see tax rates for the rich go back to where they were during
boom years of the Clinton Administration. That’s because the Bush tax cuts
for the rich saved each of the tiny number of taxpayers making over
$1,000,000 per year over $100,000 per year in taxes. For the truly wealthy “
masters of the universe” on Wall Street we’re talking millions of dollars.
Who can blame them? I’m sure most voters would agree that it’s more
important to save millions for the guys who sunk the economy and still make $10
million dollar bonuses – rather than protect the income of $14,000 per
year retirees. Actually, maybe not. And that’s exactly why most seasoned
Republican candidates keep their mouths shut about such things – but not the
Tea Party gang.
Then there is Nevada Senate candidate Sharon Angle’s support for the
proposition that Medicare should be abolished and replaced with vouchers for
private insurance. No worry that virtually every Medicare beneficiary you
talk to loves the program -- and that almost everyone over 55 years old can’t
wait to qualify so that they no longer have to take their chances with
ravenous private insurance companies.
Of course, like Social Security, Republicans have opposed Medicare from
its very inception as well. In 1996, Bill Clinton ran commercials of an
iconic speech by his opponent Bob Dole bragging about how “he was there,
fighting against Medicare.” And there was Newt Gingrich’s famous pledge that
Medicare should “wither on the vine.” That makes it doubly absurd that
Republicans campaigned against health care reform by repeating over and over
the false claim that it would “cut Medicare.” But truthfulness has never
been endemic to the Republican approach to political debate.
In fairness there are some major, establishment Republican leaders who
believe that they should actually argue the merits of their totally unpopular
positions on issue like Social Security, Medicare and tax cuts for the
rich. Congressman Paul Ryan, who would be Chairman of the House Budget
Committee if the Republicans were to take back control of the House, has published
a detailed “Roadmap” on how he would privatize Social Security and
abolish Medicare and replace it with vouchers for private insurance. Much of
that “roadmap” was actually included in the Republican budget alternative
that Ryan convinced the Republicans to support last year. Now that vote has
begun to come back to haunt some of the Members who would just as soon keep
their economic views safely in the closet before the voters cast their
ballots.
Over the next 90 days many Republicans may rue the day that they took that
vote – or were seduced into believing that they could safely take the
covers off their true views on Social Security, Medicare and tax breaks for the
rich.
The problem is that many of those swing districts that they would so
dearly like to win this fall have lots of senior voters. They had been counting
on scaring those voters into supporting Republican candidates with visions
of “death panels” and lies about health reform-induced cuts in Medicare.
Many of those seniors don’t like “government spending” – but by that
they are definitely not referring to their Social Security or Medicare. They
view both as social insurance – as programs they have paid into throughout
their working lives in expectation that they would be entitled to the
advertised benefits – the same way they would under any insurance plan. In
focus groups the moment you tell these voters that Republicans support
privatizing Social Security or replacing Medicare with vouchers for private
insurance, Republican support plummets.
The public soundly rejected President Bush’s attempt to privatize Social
Security in 2005. You’d think that the experience of the stock market
meltdown where millions of people saw their life’s savings go up in smoke would
be enough to convince even the most orthodox right-winger that it’s a
terrible idea to tie Social Security to the ups and downs of the stock market.
But economic reality doesn’t seem to break through the Repubican’s
ideological and self-interest blinders.
Major Progressive organizations have launched a new coalition to press
Members of Congress to defend Social Security and Medicare, and the issue has
vaulted to the top of the issue agenda for Democratic candidates across the
country. Democratic House Members conducted over 100 events to
commemorate the 75th Anniversary of Social Security over the last weekend – and to
pledge their opposition to privatizing Social Security or cutting its
benefits. That includes commitments not to raise the retirement age – an idea
that is just terrific for guys who fly around in corporate jets, but doesn’t
go over so well if you happen to haul bricks on construction sites or flip
mattresses in hotel rooms for a living.
Americans United for Change – which was first organized to run the
successful campaign to defeat Bush’s 2005 attempt to privatize Social Security –
has launched a major new initiative to stop the “Republican sneak attack on
Social Security and Medicare.”
The Republicans have a lot to worry about when it comes to these issues.
Polls show that if the voters are talking about Social Security and
Medicare on November 2nd, Republican fortunes will drop like a rock. In fact,
these two issues are like kryptonite to Republican chances. That’s why you’ll
see mainstream Republicans scramble like mad to downplay their true
intentions – and change the subject over the weeks ahead. Republican Leader John
Boehner – who completely supports Ryan’s “Road Map” -- made the mistake
several weeks ago of blurting out that he supported raising the Social
Security retirement age to 70. Since then he has ducked and weaved when it
comes to Social Security.
But the issue won’t go away, and the Republican record is clear. Tea Party
extremists who haven’t learned yet to moderate their language – and
earnest true believers like Paul Ryan who think they can convince America that
what’s bad for them is good for them – have complicated the Republican
problem. But the real problem is that Republicans don’t believe in Social
Security and Medicare – and if the spotlight shines long enough on those
subjects, their true colors will ultimately show through. It’s up to us to make
sure that it’s not just a spotlight but a laser.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist and
author of the recent book: “Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win,”
available on _amazon.com_
(http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Your-Mother-Straight-Progressives/dp/0979585295/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1206567141&sr=8-1)
.
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