The Arizona Republic

Tea Party has eye on White House

GOP candidates for president echo movement’s goals

- Martha T. Moore Follow @USATMoore on Twitter

The Tea Party movement, a product of opposition to President Obama, is set to be a major force in choosing the president who succeeds him.

Though less organized and visible than in their earlier days, Tea Party-leaning Republican­s now see a nominating process full of presidenti­al hopefuls they helped boost to prominence.

“I think the Tea Party is going to decide who the next president of the United States is,” says Taylor Budowich, executive director of the Tea Party Express.

The Republican candidates echo the rhetoric and priorities of the once-fringe faction. But winning the presidency poses challenges: A movement that defined itself as what it opposed must now agree on policy proposals. And to capture the White House, a Tea Party-backed GOP nominee would have to appeal to more than just conservati­ve primary voters.

Many of the candidates owe their present jobs to Tea Party enthusiasm, including Rand Paul and Marco Rubio, who were elected to the Senate in 2010, and Ted Cruz, elected in 2012. Ben Carson, the retired neurosurge­on who declared Monday, is also a Tea Party favorite.

Conservati­ve activists started holding “Tea Party” protests in 2009 to vent outrage over federal stimulus spending, the Wall Street bailout and rising national debt. The movement culminated in the 2010 elections, when the GOP captured the House.

In the years since, the Tea Party has become as internaliz­ed to the larger Republican Party as the antiwar movement was to the Democratic Party in the 1970s, says Michael Barone, a fellow at the conservati­ve-leaning American Enterprise Institute.

The ideologica­l trajectory of the GOP in recent years, says Lara Brown, director of the George Washington University political management program, is driven by the Tea Party message.

“When people say, ‘The Republican­s have become so conservati­ve,’ that’s really what they’re talking about,” she said.

But does the Tea Party still pack the same electoral punch it did in 2010? Tea Party groups still have strong fundraisin­g and an Internet presence, and if Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee, they will undoubtedl­y co- alesce in opposition to her, according to Matt Barreto, a UCLA political scientist and coauthor of Change They Can’t Believe In: The Tea Party and Reactionar­y Politics in America.

“Are their rallies smaller now? Yes. But they will continue to be opposed to the type of policies she proposes and the type of change she represents,” he said.

The group’s influence over the primaries is not without risk, though. In 2012, GOP nominee Mitt Romney had to work so hard to establish his conservati­ve bona fides with Tea Party-leaning voters that Democrats portrayed him as too conservati­ve for the general electorate, Barreto says.

While the likely GOP presidenti­al field has an unmistakab­le Tea Party stamp, there is one notable exception among the top tier of contenders: Jeb Bush, who left the Florida governor’s office in 2007.

But even if Jeb Bush ends up with the nomination, the Tea Party has succeeded in moving the party to the right, Budowich says.

In his two terms as Florida governor, Bush “was probably one of the most conservati­ve governors in modern history,” Budowich says. “If that’s our establishm­ent guy then ... we’ve done pretty well.”

 ?? RICHARD ELLIS, GETTY IMAGES ?? Retired neurosurge­on Ben Carson, shown in January, is among several Tea Party favorites running for president.
RICHARD ELLIS, GETTY IMAGES Retired neurosurge­on Ben Carson, shown in January, is among several Tea Party favorites running for president.

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