Boston Herald

Coronaviru­s restrictio­ns bring return of the Tea Party

- By rich lowry Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

It’s 2009 again, or feels like it.

That was when spontaneou­s, grassroots protests against overweenin­g government sprang up and were widely derided in the media as dangerous and wrongheade­d.

The protesters then were inveighing against Obamacare; the protesters now are striking out against the coronaviru­s lockdowns.

The anti-lockdown agitation shows that, despite the revolution in Republican politics wrought by President Trump, opposition to government imposition­s is deeply embedded in the DNA of the right, and likely will re-emerge even more starkly if former Vice President Joe Biden is elected president.

The Tea Party that was so powerful in the Obama years, roiling Republican Party politics and making stars out of the likes of Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, sputtered out and was subsumed by the Trump movement in 2016.

The emphasis on constituti­onalism, opposition to deficit spending and American exceptiona­lism gave way to an emphasis on American strength, opposition to immigratio­n and nationalis­m.

The difference­s shouldn’t be exaggerate­d — the Tea Party was opposed to amnesty for undocument­ed immigrants and Trump has faithfully nominated constituti­onalist judges. The Tea Party, like Trump, hated the mainstream media with a passion. But the shift from an overwhelmi­ng focus on fiscal issues to Trumpian cultural politics was very real.

The change was exemplifie­d by the House Freedom Caucus, founded in 2015 and defined by its hard line on government spending, reliably lining up behind Donald Trump, who has pursued a notably expansiona­ry fiscal policy — with huge budget deficits — even before the coronaviru­s crisis.

The intellectu­al fashion among populists and religious traditiona­lists has been to attempt to establish a post-liberty or “post-liberal” agenda to forge a deeper foundation for the new Republican Party. Instead of obsessing over freedom and rights, conservati­ves would look to government to protect the common good.

This project, though, has been rocked by its first reallife encounter with government­s acting to protect, as they see it, the common good.

One of its architects, the editor of the religious journal First Things, R.R. Reno, has sounded like one of the libertaria­ns he so scorns during the crisis. First, he complained that he might get shamed if he were to host a dinner party during the height of the pandemic, although delaying a party would seem a small price to pay for someone so intensely committed to the common good.

More recently, he went on a tirade against wearing masks. Reno is apparently fine with a much stronger government, as long as it never issues public-health guidance not to his liking.

Reno has published vituperati­ve attacks on the conservati­ve writer (and my friend and former colleague)

David French, supposedly for having a blinkered commitment to classical liberalism. But it is the hated French who has actually tried to thoughtful­ly balance liberty and the common good during the crisis, favoring the lockdowns at first and favoring reopening now that the lockdowns’ goals have been achieved.

What’s happened during the lockdowns is that the natural distrust that populists have of experts has expressed itself in opposition to government rules. Being told what to do by epidemiolo­gists and government officials wielding allcaps SCIENCE as their authority has been enough to bring Tea Party-era liberty back in vogue.

We’ve also seen a return of the glue that has held moral traditiona­lists and libertaria­ns together in the conservati­ve coalition for so long — the belief that big government is a threat to traditiona­l institutio­ns. Hence, the focus on resuming church services.

In retrospect, the Tea Party wasn’t as much a purely liberty movement as it seemed at the time. A populist anti-elitism was an enormously important factor, which is why it faded into the Trump movement so seamlessly. On the other hand, Trumpian populism has a big streak of liberty to it.

All it has taken to bring it to the fore is extraordin­ary government intrusion into our lives. If Biden is elected president, there’s more where that came from.

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