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And Now They're Coming for Newt

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November 3, 2009 | 2:39 p.m
<br /> (Getty Images)
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When Newt Gingrich warns Republicans that they are making a grave “mistake” by driving out moderates and enforcing the bizarre orthodoxy of the far right, the novelty of his remarks alone is stunning. This is a politician who is no stranger himself to the wilder shores of extremism, a populist and a purist who rose to great power against the G.O.P. establishment, and a demagogue whose lexicon lacerated the “Democrat Party” as decadent, elitist, unpatriotic and immoral.

In short, Mr. Gingrich channeled the same phobias and fury as the Tea Party activists whose growing influence in Republican ranks seems to have shaken him so badly. Why is Newt scared?

Despite his ranting against the Eastern elites, the former House speaker is a college graduate, a professional historian and an intellectual with wide-ranging interests—making him a figure of potential suspicion to radio talkers without much formal education and the raving mobs that follow them. Much as he exploited the prejudices of the religious right and fantasies of the conspiracy crowd, Mr. Gingrich has always affected a more sophisticated and urbane attitude. He may be troubled to realize that he suddenly ranks far lower than Sarah Palin, who can barely utter a coherent political thought, or Glenn Beck, who enthralls his audience with weird, weepy rants.

Leaving aside his own lingering presidential ambitions, Mr. Gingrich understandably feels that this brand of leadership will have a very limited appeal for most Americans—and that the more voters see of it, the less they will like it.

Is it fair to stigmatize the teabaggers and their leaders as a movement of the fringe? In New York’s 23rd Congressional District, Douglas Hoffman, the right-wing carpetbagger who drove out moderate local Republican Dede Scozzafava, has apprenticed himself to Mr. Beck, obsequiously flattering the Fox News host as his “mentor.” He signed a pledge to uphold the “912 principles and values” endorsed by Mr. Beck—a juvenile tract that demands honesty, thrift, humility and charity even as it complains that government forces citizens to “share” when they don’t want to. As far as Mr. Beck is concerned, all Democrats are “Marxist” and almost all Republicans are “Marxist lite.”

No doubt Mr. Hoffman is eagerly studying the collected writings of the late Cleon Skousen, the Beck-endorsed prophet whose speeches used to stir up meetings of the John Birch Society—mostly against Republicans of the Rockefeller and Kissinger variety.

If the revival of Birchite mania troubles Mr. Gingrich, then the Palin phenomenon, now breaking loose with the publication of her memoir, could be equally disturbing. The former Alaska governor has a long, Beck-like history of affiliation with bizarre causes and characters, including an Alaska secessionist party and a Kenyan witch-hunting evangelist who conducted an exorcism rite in her Wasilla church. She will ignore or minimize those episodes in Going Rogue, but putting extra lipstick on the pit bull may not help.

Most Americans don’t know much yet about the idiosyncratic ideology of the Tea Party crowd, beyond their conviction that President Obama was born in Kenya (and that his birth announcement in the Hawaii newspapers must therefore be part of a plot that dates back to the Kennedy era). What they have seen so far, they don’t seem to like: The more that Mr. Beck, Ms, Palin and kindred spirits appear to represent the Republican brand, the less appeal that brand possesses.

From the perspective of Mr. Gingrich and other veteran Republicans, there is deep irony in these untoward developments. Most of the Tea Party types actually hate Republican politicians, unless, like Ronald Reagan, they are dead. They hate Democrats, of course—and lots of other people—but their invective against Republicans is suffused with special outrage. If they have their way, every Republican who doesn’t adhere to the Beck canon will be driven out at the end of a pitchfork, just like poor Ms. Scozzafava.

Once upon a time, when Newt rode to power on the resentments of the religious right, the gun lobby and the economic royalists, he celebrated their extremism as the political style of “normal Americans.” Now when he hears the violent rhetoric, the hateful threats and the fanatical intolerance, he knows they are talking about him, too.

 

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Not a Puppet

I'm not a puppet as your writer apparently is, I'm 65 yrs old and have been a registered Republican all my life.
I listen and read about the canadates, and then vote for the candidate that I feel is the best for our country, I many times vote split tickets, as I did today in our local elections as well as for our congressional rep. I live in the 23rd and have my entire life. I am not a member of the consertive movement, and have not been personally involved in any canadates compaign. However, after listening,reading,and listening to some of the lies that I found out were untrue, set up signs, stapled literature, and met personally with Doug Hoffman. Your writer assumes anyone voting for doug is a follower of some organization.
NOT TRUE, some of can still think and do for ourselves!!!

Gingrich's seed sowing and Beck reaping the whirlwind etc....

Gingrich and other right wing ideologues will never accept responsibility for the damage their blasphemous rhetoric has done to this once great country. They have created this "Brownshirt Monster" that wants to devour everyone in its path--even it's creator.

The Party of Fear

The GOP, dating back to the Nixon years, has a long history of appealing to the baser instincts of its voters. The events of the last 2-3 years, in which the Tea Party crowd has attempted to defeat President Obama by casting doubt about his citizenship and his religious beliefs, are only the latest examples of the use of fear and bigotry to accomplish political goals that do not command an electoral majority.

When the only qualification for office seems to be one's animus towards homosexuals, immigrants, and racial minorities, you end up with a party led by the uneducated and the ignorant, with figureheads like Sarah Palin, Sean Hannity, Glen Beck, and Rush Limbaugh. As the GOP purges itself of all ideological moderates, it will interesting to see how their fortunes turn on the national stage. In a world where education, science, and technology have become paramount, the GOP appears to be withdrawing from that world and inhabiting a strange parallel universe where science and data are denounced as fuzzy math and myths. For the sake of the country, I hope that the Republican Party eventually halts its retreat from reality, and embraces the real world once again. I'm not optimistic about this possibility, however. The habits of the last 40 years could be very hard to break. The GOP of 2009 is basically a John Birch Society party, not a Rockefeller party.

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