musings on faith, values, politics and all things in between

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Tea Party Turning RINO’s Into Endangered Species

By Mark Henry

If there was any doubt that Tea Partiers have moderate Republicans in their crosshairs, those doubts were decisively removed by the GOP primary election results last night.

Tea Party backed candidates swept the GOP primary last night, emerging victorious over GOP Party backed candidates in Delaware and New York.

Christine O’Donnell’s upset win over moderate Michael Castle in the U.S. Senate primary in Delaware was particularly surprising. Mr. Castle, a former two-term Republican governor in blue-state Delaware was comfortably ahead in the polls until recently. Christine O’Donnell, a former abstinence counselor, was endorsed by Sarah Palin and the Tea Party mobilized behind O’Donnell to carry her to victory in the GOP primary.

In New York, Carl Paladino plowed through GOP establishment candidate Rick Lazio on his way to winning the Republican gubernatorial primary. Most pundits are attributing Paladino’s victory to an anti-Albany Tea Party supported effort over Rick Lazio who was backed by the New York GOP establishment.

With last night’s GOP primary wins, the Tea Party movement juggernaught continues with an increasing number of RINO’s notched in it’s belt. Moderate Republican U.S. Senators Arlene Specter (PA), Robert Bennett (UT) and Lisa Murkowski (AK) are now former Senators thanks largely to grass roots Tea Party efforts.

The Tea Party movement’s success is attributable at least in part to a growing constituency of citizens who are fed up with all things big, whether it be big government, big business or big labor. More and more voters are waking up and realizing that entrenched political incumbents no longer serve the best interests of the common man. Tea Party activists believe that elected officials have elevated themselves to an elite ruling class that is little concerned with the plight of common man.

As a bottom up grass roots political movement, the Tea Party has so far resisted efforts to ideologically stifle its members enthusiasm by developing a comprehensive party platform. However, the time is coming when this growing political phenomenon will have to develop ideologically, while retaining the “no” to big government plank as a cornerstone.

If you scratch the surface of the Tea Party, the core Catholic social teaching of subsidiarity emerges. This principle states that as a general rule political decisions and other matters generally should be handled by the smallest, lowest or least centralized competent authority. Subsidiarity as a socio-political principle has weathered the test of time while competing ideologies like socialism and statism have been disproven and should have been relegated to the junk pile of failed ideas.

When you think about it, the Tea Party movement could do no better than to embrace the time tested principle of subsidiarity as the foundation to support its cornerstone philosophy of opposition to big government.

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