0857249118 by Julian Go
Author:Julian Go [Go, Julian]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2012-09-04T16:44:46+00:00
The
Tea
Party
in
the
Age
of
Obama
129
Fig. 1.
Public Support for Tea Party and Out-Group Attitudes. Source: 2010 Multistate Survey on Race and Politics Pilot Study.
130
MATT A. BARRETO ET AL.
able to detain terror suspects as long as they wish without putting them on
trial. Although just 7% of those who disapprove of the Tea Party agree with
suspending trials, 39.5% of Tea Party supporters agree with unlimited
detentions. On other civil liberties topics such as profiling, phone taps, and
police searches, our pilot study finds Tea Party supporters are consistently
willing to give the federal government more authority to intervene in
people’s lives.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
Over the past few decades America has experienced many social, demo-
graphic, and political changes. In particular, the minority and immigrant
population has grown dramatically, and this has culminated in the election of
many prominent African American, Latino, and Asian American candidates
to office. At the same time, minority groups have continued to promote equal
rights, especially civil rights, for a range of groups including racial/ethnic
minorities, but also women, gays and lesbians. To an extent, the shock of
these social changes to the dominant in-group was absorbed by the previous
eight years of the Republican presidency of George W. Bush. Even as society
and demographics changed, calling into question the perceived social order of
yesteryear, political control of the country rested in the hands of a Republican
administration. In 2008 everything changed, with the election of Barack
Obama as the first African American president in America’s history.
Although this alone was not the sole inspiration of the Tea Party movement,
the election of Obama provided an opening for his staunchest critics to reach
out to those disaffected by the social change in America, and to perhaps
question, ‘‘what happened to my country?’’ Not only did the social and
demographic landscape of America look different in 2008 than it did a
generation before, but so too did the President of the United States.
In this chapter, we set out to assess the extent to which Richard
Hofstadter’s pseudo-conservative framework fit with the Tea Party.
Ultimately, we observed a fairly snug fit. The Tea Party, as the contemporary
representation of the extreme right, is pretty consistent with its predecessors,
sharing with them the major tenets of right-wing extremism. All share an
aversion to social change, and tend to transform the manifestly political into a
crusade of good versus evil, often White heterosexual versus other. These
groups also share a preference for maintaining the status quo, and tend to
subscribe to conspiratorial thinking, demonizing their ‘‘enemies.’’ Though
many pundits describe the Tea Party as the conservative wing of the
The Tea Party in the Age of Obama
131
Republican Party, we find that conservatism alone is not driving the Tea
Party. At a much deeper level, Tea Party sympathizers are concerned with the
distribution of goods and rights in a changing America. Although spending
on Social Security is something that must be protected at all costs, spending
on public education, English as a second language, or health care for all must
be avoided at all costs.
With the analyses, insofar as it’s possible to do so, we sought to explore
the contours of pseudo-conservatism. If, as many sympathetic to the Tea
Party claim, they are really simply die-hard conservatives, and not
extremists, this should have evident in the content analysis.
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