Orlando Sentinel

US is still hung over from tea party. Don’t let ’22 midterms be a repeat

- LZ Granderson is a Los Angeles Times

There’s a Twitter game that routinely starts whenever a new, frightenin­g revelation about the Trump administra­tion becomes public: Clips of Hillary Clinton predicting that specific horror are resurrecte­d. It’s really quite remarkable. From President Donald Trump’s affinity for Russia’s Vladimir Putin to his refusal to accept the election results. (“Every time Donald thinks things are not going in his direction, he claims whatever it is is rigged against him,” she said in 2016 during the final debate between the two.) There are so many documented examples of Clinton’s warnings coming to pass that it’s easy to see why the 2016 election still takes up a lot of oxygen.

But the truth is, the nation began gasping for air in February 2010.

It started in a corner of New York state politics. For 13 years the 3rd Assembly District of eastern Long Island had been represente­d by Democrats. Then came L. Dean Murray. With the endorsemen­t of Sarah Palin (then wildly popular) and the wind of anti-government sentiment at his back, this Republican candidate scored the 160-vote lead he needed to become the first tea party activist elected to office.

You remember the tea party, don’t you? The predominan­tly white, supposedly anti-big-government movement that was all fired up about the deficit once the first Black president was in the White House. Then Donald Trump shows up, hands out a $1.5-trillion package of tax cuts to the rich, increases the debt to the third-highest level in history (behind George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln), and Palin and company are behind him all the way. Wonder why?

Anyway, Murray’s success was an indication of what was possible for the tea party. We don’t need to totally rehash the historic “shellackin­g” Democrats took in November 2010, do we?

It is important to at least remember that many of the recent state laws regarding reproducti­ve rights, transgende­r student-athletes and voting are a byproduct of a tea party movement that gave Republican­s six governors’ offices and flipped 21 statehouse chambers. Nearly 700 Democratic state legislator­s were moved out of office.

What did apathetic voters think was going to happen to progressiv­e policies?

But it was when Eric Cantor lost in the primary (to the tea-party-backed David Brat) in 2014, becoming the first sitting House majority leader in this country’s history to lose a primary, that the remaining moderate Republican­s fell in line. And they’ve been in line ever since.

Right, Susan Collins?

Sure, the tea party brand has lost pizzazz, but its influence can still be felt. And I don’t just mean the racist tropes that found new life during the Obama years.

Look, Clinton’s eerie foreshadow­ing aside, the point is the nation’s current ills didn’t begin because she lost in 2016. It was when roughly 45 million 2008 voters decided to sit out 2010. Check the receipts: That’s when President Obama’s agenda became handcuffed by obstructio­n; that’s when gerrymande­ring began to make more and more states look red; that’s how a Supreme Court justice gets denied a hearing and Roe vs. Wade becomes unsettled law.

Back to New York: Nearly 60,000 voted in that district in 2008, of which north of 30,000 supported the Democrat. But it was sexy to vote in 2008, wasn’t it? The history of it all. Then disillusio­nment quickly followed and by February 2010, a tea party activist in a predominan­tly Democratic district was sent to Albany after winning only 4,396 votes.

And so here we are again, only this time we’re barreling toward a midterm while state government­s are trying to force women to give birth against their will. It’s important … but will people see it as being as important as the presidenti­al election? History says no, which is why turnout is typically significan­tly lower. And that’s what the conservati­ves want, as they are eyeing reproducti­ve rights now and same-sex marriage later. For the midterm numbers to be low.

It seems conservati­ves — whether tea party or not — have figured out something most other voters continue to struggle to grasp: The stakes in these elections are high as well.

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By LZ Granderson

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