I take exception to that notion. Tea Party, to me, means conservative. It means small government, anti-Obamacare. We want less government, not more. Is a hardline stance on that fringe?
Well, ya, it kind of is. The main issue is the simpistic and ignorant opposition to all kinds of 'good' spending, but there's hypocrisy among most too when it comes to defense.
What do tea party polls show among Medicare recipients about cutting their benefits in that program?
They're a sort of mob whipped up to hate government but without much clue about it, the pawns of the mega wealthy who simply want more plutocacy and use them.
Take the sequester for a fine example. Is it fringe to tackle the budget deficit
Well, yes, it kind of is, when you consider the sequester will actually make the deficit worse for some time.
Because it's not that simple as basic arithmetic. It's not like you are spending on cigaretted and if you cut that spending, you save the money.
Cuts to a lot of these programs cuts economic growth the spending brings; some of them just transfer the costs to the citizens, further hurting the economy.
That's some of that 'ignorance' I mentioned.
The Republican Party has betrayed the tenants of conservatism, so the party has "enemies" within it as well who need to be forced out or excluded. They're fighting back hard by calling the Tea Party extremist, but the alternative has been big government Neocon such as Bush and Rove. If they win the day then budget cuts shall never happen, as exampled by the Bush Presidency.
Let's name three factions of Republicans for this topic. One is the 'tea party' faction I covered above. A second is the 'corporatist' faction you mention above - we agree.
The third faction, though, are those more 'moderate' Republicans - hard to find now - who have a bit more of a clue about governing than either of those two groups. For example, Buddy Rohmer, former Congressman and Governor who ran in the 2012 presidential race and couldn't get in the debates. Or perhaps the Republican Congressman now touring with President Obama about the sequester.
On many issues, Dwight Eisenhower or Nelseon Rockefeller could be included.
While the tea party and corporatists are at war, the 'good' faction of Republicans are almost extinct. The ony alternative to the tea party is not the corporatists, however.
I take this fight as the very question over government largess, and if we should simply continue to expand it as is. If we are _ever_ going to do something about it. "Tea Party" is the only one in a long time who would.
It's the wrong answer. It's a bit like people who come to oppose the Vietnam war being told 'the only choice are the people who want to blow up the capitol'.
Just because you agree with them on something as a general direction doesn't mean they aren't a terrible option - them and their billionare Koch type backers with another agenda.
There are citizens who have legitimate concersn about the deficit - many are Democrats. I do. There are billionares who use that issue to push an agenda of greed for themselves.