Chattanooga Times Free Press

MEET THE NEW TEA PARTY, SAME AS THE OLD TEA PARTY

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Has a new version of the tea party unleashed itself on our politics?

In recent weeks, as Republican­s and right-wing personalit­ies have ramped up vaccine derangemen­t, attacks on critical race theory and whitewashi­ng of the insurrecti­on, it’s become clear that we’re witnessing a virulent new version of the movement that arose amid the last Democratic presidency.

Both mobilized the grass roots with crackpot conspiracy theories, racial dog whistles and apocalypti­c depictions of the impending liberal destructio­n of the American life.

But still another similarity deserves more attention. Just as before, the new tea partyism is functionin­g as a kind of front-line energizing force that could help enable a series of GOP donor-class and plutocrati­c interests to grind the current progressiv­e economic moment to a halt.

Senate Democrats just announced a deal on a $3.5 trillion spending target for “human infrastruc­ture” in the reconcilia­tion bill. Though details are scarce and there’s a long way to go, passage is now more plausible.

With a $579 billion bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and $2 trillion in spending from the COVID-19 relief package, we could be looking at expenditur­es in the multiple trillions.

But behind all the right-wing culture-warring you can see a right-wing economic counter-mobilizati­on against this progressiv­e momentum that looks a lot like the one arrayed behind the tea party in 2010.

Case in point: Conservati­ve groups are now organizing against an effort to beef up IRS enforcemen­t to go after tax avoidance, largely by the wealthy and corporatio­ns. This is a key progressiv­e provision to help fund the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill.

This effort to prevent the IRS from cracking down on wealthy tax cheats is being sold in language that echoes the lurid lunacy of the Obama years.

Back then, right-wing media constantly hyped “scandals” involving the IRS. This time, opponents are referencin­g some of those same “scandals.”

Once again, “antitax activism” functions as a smokescree­n for other interests. To be fair, this time the interests are a bit scrambled: Business groups do want an infrastruc­ture bill, and may tolerate this as a pay-for.

But the core idea behind this new proposal is that the budgetary underfundi­ng of IRS enforcemen­t has enabled corporatio­ns and the wealthy to get away with years and years of tax avoidance, because they have the resources to exploit that underenfor­cement.

On another front, Punchbowl News reports that GOP donors are lining up in the expectatio­n of a House GOP takeover. McCarthy just announced a monster new fundraisin­g total for House GOP candidates.

All this — along with attacks on critical race theory — plainly serves to energize the base in service of that restoratio­n sought by GOP donors and other right-wing economic interests to block the progressiv­e advance.

Meanwhile, the advancing of the reconcilia­tion measure will usher in a huge debate about President Joe Biden’s proposed progressiv­e tax changes for the bill. This may include raising corporate tax rates to at least 25 percent, a minimum tax on corporatio­ns that pay almost nothing, and efforts to crack down on multinatio­nals sheltering profits abroad.

For the old tea party, the lurid claims of impending destructio­n of the American way of life bled effortless­ly into charges of socialism about Barack Obama’s economic policies — in that case, a government expansion of health insurance that conservati­ves once championed. In practice, the energized base meant a House GOP takeover - and a check on progressiv­ism that led to years of grueling austerity.

The same is happening again. The charges of “Marxism” and “socialism” are being hurled at both the right’s new cultural bugaboos and at Democratic economic policies. The same blend of pathologic­al fearmonger­ing could again energize the base in a way that could enable right-wing economic interests to stage a check on economic progress.

Meet the new tea party, same as the old tea party.

 ?? Greg Sargent ??
Greg Sargent

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