Where are the Republican populists?
E.J. Dionne
January 20, 2012
AIKEN, S.C.
— Members of the tea party insisted they were turning the GOP
into a populist, anti-establishment bastion. Social conservatives have
long argued that values and morals matter more than money. Yet in the
end, the corporate and economically conservative wing of the Republican
Party always seems to win.
Jeezuz Effen Christ, ED - DUH - in the end, the corporate and economical and acedemic elites of whatever party is in office always seems to win - this is just as your bosses wish, and just as every conceivable ginormous international corporation wants things to be ... with them winning everything, and the rabble, being pacified with promises of chocolate cake!
Thus was Mitt Romney so confident of
victory in Saturday's South Carolina primary that he left the state
briefly Tuesday for a fundraiser in New York. And why not? The power of
big money has been amplified in this campaign by the super PACs let
loose by the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision and lax
regulation.
You cannot watch the morning news shows in South
Carolina without confronting an intricately confusing blitz of ads, some
paid for by candidates, others by the supposedly independent PACs. One
kind is indistinguishable from the other.
The nature of the ads
shows why it would be a major upset were Romney to lose here. Although
Romney's opponents direct some of their fire his way, they are spending a
fortune tearing each other apart. Ron Paul assails Newt Gingrich and
Rick Santorum. Romney's supporters have piled on with ads against
Gingrich.
Gingrich flicks aside Santorum with faint praise in his
speeches, as he did at an event here Tuesday night, maintaining that
"the only effective vote to stop Mitt Romney is Newt Gingrich." And it
does seem, from the polls and the buzz, that Gingrich is the only option
whose momentum gives him at least an outside chance of getting by
Romney. But Santorum is not giving way, which is why Romney could afford
his side trip to Manhattan.
"People have treated Romney coming in
first as a foregone conclusion and gone for second," said Joel Sawyer,
who consulted for Jon Huntsman and is now neutral. "I see that as a
fundamentally flawed strategy. A very significant number of Republicans
are looking for an alternative, but what Romney's opponents have done is
weaken each other."
Bob McAlister, who served as the late
Republican Gov. Carroll Campbell's chief of staff, said a Romney victory
would be the result of the conservative split, "not because Romney is
so strong or well-liked by South Carolinians."
The confusion was
obvious at the well-attended event here for Gingrich. Interviewed as
they stood in line to shake hands with the candidate, voter after voter
said they mistrusted Romney — Scott Gilmer, an engineer, saw Romney as
"a whole lot like Obama" — but many expressed indecision between
Gingrich and Santorum.
What's remarkable is that Romney seems to
be closing in on a victory at the very moment when he is painting
himself as the anti-populist and a tone-deaf economic elitist. Not only
did he suggest Tuesday that he pays a low 15 percent tax rate (because
most of his income derives from investments), he also dismissed the
money he made from speaking fees as "not very much." It turned out that,
over the year ending last February, speeches earned him more than
$370,000. That's not chump change for most folks.
Think about
Romney's rise in light of the overheated political analysis of 2010 that
saw a Republican Party as being transformed by the tea party legions
who, in alliance with an overlapping group of social and religious
conservatives, would take the party away from the establishmentarians.
If I had a dollar for every time the new GOP was described in those days
as "populist," I suspect I'd have more than Romney made from his
lectures.
Certainly some of the movement's failures can be
attributed to a flawed set of competitors and the split on the right,
especially Paul's ability to siphon off a significant share of the tea
party vote. That has made a consolidation of its forces impossible.
(Romney may owe Paul an appointment to the Federal Reserve.)
But
there is another possibility: that the GOP never was and never can be a
populist party, that the term was always being misapplied and that
enough Republicans are quite comfortable with a Harvard-educated
private-equity specialist.
"Romney is as establishment as they come," McAlister said.
For
many conservatives, he added, a fall campaign between Romney and
President Barack Obama could thus be a choice between "which of the two
establishments do you hate most."
That's not where the tea party's promoters said we were headed.
Washington Post Writers Group
E.J. Dionne is a syndicated columnist based in Washington.
Copyright © 2012, Chicago Tribune
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