By Steve Hynd
Dana Milbank in the WaPo today writes about the plutocrats behind the Tea Party. Thousands of Tea Partiers sent money to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce because Glenn Beck told them to, swelling the political purchasing power of the Chamber
Listed as members of the chamber's board are representatives from Pfizer, ConocoPhillips, Lockheed Martin, JPMorgan Chase, Dow Chemical, Ken Starr's old law and lobbying firm, and Rolls-Royce North America. Nothing says grass-roots insurgency quite like Rolls-Royce -- and nothing says populist revolt quite like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In describing the big-business group as "us," Beck (annual revenue: $32 million) provided an unintended moment of clarity into the power behind the Tea Party movement. These aren't peasants with pitchforks; these are plutocrats with payrolls.
There is genuine populist anger out there. But the angry have been deceived and exploited by posers who belong to the same class of "elites" and "insiders" that the Tea Party movement supposedly deplores. Americans who want to stick it to the man are instead sending money to the man.
Consider the candidates on the ballot next month who are getting Tea Party support. In the Connecticut Senate race, there's Linda McMahon, who with her husband has a billion-dollar pro-wrestling empire. The challenger to Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold in Wisconsin, Ron Johnson, is a millionaire manufacturing executive. The former head of Gateway computers, Rick Snyder, is spending generously from his fortune to win the Michigan governor's race.
In New York, the Republican gubernatorial candidate is developer Carl Paladino, with a net worth put at $150 million. And Rick Scott, running for governor in Florida, has a net worth of $219 million from his career as a health-care executive. Then there's California, where the Republican Senate nominee is former Hewlett-Packard chief executive Carly Fiorina and the gubernatorial candidate is former e-Bay boss Meg Whitman.
The Tea Party's loyalists are heading for a major fall when they finally figure out that, just like Obamatrons, they've been fooled by a smart PR line about hope and change.
I haven't read anyone who understands the mind of the Tea Party. There will be no disappointment because they are basically the Republican base and the Republican base is made up of Authoritarians. They don't see it as voting against their own best interests because they like having a class of powerful plutocrats in the lead and don't resent the power and the wealth the plutocrats have.
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