hide captionTea Party activists rally in front of the U.S. Capitol in June 2013.
Tea Party activists rally in front of the U.S. Capitol in June 2013.
The time has come for us all to take a long, step-back look at this thing we call the Tea Party.
The results from Republican primaries in a dozen states so far this year strongly suggest that the party, such as it was, is over.
It may not have made sense to use the term "party" at any time in this movement's brief history. This year, that fact has become increasingly obvious.
The Tea Party was not so much an organized force in itself as an outburst that others tried to harness. The name was shorthand for an energy that suddenly coursed through the conservative community in the first months of the Obama presidency.
The sources of that energy were and are highly diverse. The effects were undeniable in down-ballot races in most of the country in 2010 and 2012. But the energy never really assumed the form of a conventional political party, and it did not build the machinery that could produce reliable candidates and campaigns.
Yet the handle of "Tea Party" remains irresistible for ad-makers, activists, journalists and a boundless world of commentators in the social media space.
That is why it surprises a lot of people to see this Tea Party suddenly looking so impotent, even as President Obama and his party look increasingly vulnerable. One would think the most anti-Obama elements of the right would be on the march.
Yet Republican incumbents and other candidates backed by the party's business and political elites have won the nominations for November nearly everywhere anyone was noticing. Where insurgents arose with a clear claim to being Tea Party favorites, they have lost. In many cases, they have flat-lined weeks before the primary.
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Is The Tea Party Finished?