By ALBERT R. HUNT | BLOOMBERG VIEW
Published: October 20, 2013
WASHINGTON — In the aftermath of the U.S. government shutdown and a close call with default, there is a political consensus among Democrats, many Republicans, establishment conservatives, business leaders and the inside-the-Beltway commentariat: SenatorTed Cruz of Texas and Tea Party members in the House have done grievous harm to themselves and their brand.
They caused economic and political wreckage and got nothing for it. The silver lining, critics say, is that these right-wingers may now be chastened, and Mr. Cruz’s national ambitions have been dealt a lethal setback.
That, however, isn’t the way Deedee Vaughters and Bob Vander Plaats see things.
“We’re winning this argument and now have to go back at Obamacare and getting our fiscal house in order,” says Ms. Vaughters, a Tea Party activist in Aiken, South Carolina. Mr. Vander Plaats, who heads an influential family-values group in Iowa, agrees: “Ted Cruz is a rock star sucking all the energy in the conservative movement. He’s making all the right enemies with the Republican establishment, which is taking him to unprecedented heights.” The reaction of these grass-roots activists may undercut hopes of mainstream party leaders that the Cruz-led shutdown — for which most Americans blamed Republicans — would have a sobering effect on the right wing and avoid such mayhem in the future. Yet the showdown may have only whetted the appetite for more confrontation, starting with the budget and debt battles early next year and stretching through the 2014 midterm elections and the 2016 presidential contest.
Some on both sides relish the fight. Congressman Peter T. King, an 11-term Republican from New York, says this is the time to break the Tea Party: He’s considering running for his party’s 2016 presidential nomination as the only guy who “came out and condemned Ted Cruz and said, ‘This is wrong.”’ By contrast, Erick Erickson, the influential conservative blogger, sees a “break” in the opposite direction. “There will not necessarily be a new party from it,” he wrote, “but there will be a fundamentally altered party of new faces fueled by a grass-roots movement now able to connect with each other and independent from Wall Street and K Street funders.” Some in the party say the recent debacle will cause Republicans to be more selective and skillful in challenging the administration.
“There will be an endgame strategy next time, and we have something to trade that Democrats want: a loosening of the sequester spending cuts in return for significant entitlement reform,” predicts the antitax activist Grover Norquist. For the right-wing activists, as well as some prominent Tea Party House members, the marching orders are: Don’t let up, especially on the Affordable Care Act.
“We’ve made real progress, and next time we have to reset and refocus on the debt and Obamacare,” Representative Ted Yoho, the freshman Republican from Florida, said in an interview last week, hours before he voted against the deal that ended the government shutdown and prevented default.
The Oct. 16 votes exposed the Republican Party’s fractures. In the House, caucus members cheered Speaker John A. Boehner for holding them together, and then 62 percent of them voted against the deal he endorsed. In the Senate, Mr. Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul — all potential 2016 presidential aspirants — voted against the accord.
These intraparty animosities will be fought out legislatively and electorally next year, but any resolution seems impossible before the 2016 presidential race. Mr. Cruz, who is despised by a number of his Senate colleagues and much of the party establishment, could be the most formidable far-right candidate in a generation.
The only way to avoid a bloodbath may be if a candidate emerges from outside Washington who has credibility on both sides — for example, Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, Republicans who believe the end of the shutdown ended the political storms should heed the message of Michael Corleone in “The Godfather: Part III”: “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in.”
American conservatives:
Not born in Kenya.
Not born in solar system either.
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George McGovern: "The Case For Liberalism: A Defense Of The Future Against The Past"
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"Politics and Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/01/politics-and-economics-101-curricula.html
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"The Daily Show Asks A Real Hostage Negotiator How To Handle The GOP"
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"What Do You Hate More? Poverty Or Obama? Brought To You By Spite"
Republican Rule And Economic Catastrophe: A Lockstep Relationship"
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"Jon Stewart Takes John Boehner To Task"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/10/malala-yousafzai-leaves-jon-stewart.html
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"Politics and Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"
"American Conservatives And Oppositional Defiant Disorder"
"Catastrophic Consequences Of A U.S. Debt Default Explained, Including A Depression"
"Conservatives Scare More Easily Than Liberals"
"Politics and Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/01/politics-and-economics-101-curricula.html
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New Yorker Cartoon: The Invisible Hand's Impact On 90% Of The Population
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Republican presidential candidate, Pat Buchanan, the living American who has served longest as a White House senior staff adviser, observed: “The Republican philosophy might be summarized thus: To hell with principle; what matters is power, and that we have it, and that they do not.” “Where the Right Went Wrong"
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"The Reign of Morons Is Here," Charles P. Pierce, The Atlantic
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"A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"
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Diane Rehm's Brilliant Panel Discussion: "Possible Repercussions Of A U.S. Debt Default At Home And Abroad"
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"The Great Recession Vaporized 40% Of Americas's Net Worth. The Tea Party Intends Worse."
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"The Shutdown Is A Republican Civil War" by Ezra Klein
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Republican Rule And Economic Catastrophe: A Lockstep Relationship"
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http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/10/malala-yousafzai-leaves-jon-stewart.html
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"Politics and Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"
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"Sarah Palin As The Mad Hatter" (Image)
"Republicans for Revolution," A Study In Anarchic Apocalypticism
"Sarah Palin As The Mad Hatter" (Image)
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"Shocking Development: Republicans Shut Down Prefrontal Cortex"
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"Jon Stewart Nails GOP Demands For Re-Opening Government"
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"Shutting Down Government Begs The Question: Which Government?"
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