The Right Opinion
The Tea Party vs. The Establishment
The stars are aligned for Mitt Romney. In every Republican debate, he has been left relatively untouched by the moderators and by every candidate save Gov. Rick Perry of Texas. He continues to ride high in the national polling, holding steady at near one quarter of the likely Republican primary voters. The Republican Party bigwigs, including key funders on Wall Street, are throwing their support to him.
There's only one problem: He'll lose the general election.
He'll lose the general election for a very simple reason: Nobody in the conservative base is excited about him. While the so-called GOP opinion leaders wax on about how super-electable he is, they fail to recognize that it is precisely that logic that gave us the unelectable John McCain. Turnout wins elections these days, not appeals to the independent voter.
Mitt Romney suffers from an enthusiasm gap. He seems to be everybody's second choice. He is few people's first choice. And that is a major problem for him. People pound the pavement for their favorite candidates. They work phone banks for their favorite candidates. They vote for their second favorite candidates -- but they don't work for them.
Republican Romney supporters seem to be counting on sheer dislike for President Obama to carry Romney to victory. That logic is not compelling. Democrats thought the same thing when they nominated John Kerry against the unpopular incumbent George W. Bush. But an empty suit will not beat an unpopular incumbent.
In short, Romney suffers from an enthusiasm gap. Higher-ups in the Republican Party may like the cut of Romney's jib, but the grassroots think he's a flip-flopping stiff allied with corporate cronies, not a principled leader in a crucial time. No candidate for the presidency has suffered from the enthusiasm gap and won the Oval Office since Richard Nixon in 1972. Romney will not break that pattern.
The question is whether the Republican establishment truly cares. In some ways, the Republican establishment's treatment of the Tea Party is very much like the old media's treatment of the new media in 2008. During that election cycle, the new media -- Internet and talk radio -- loudly proclaimed the irrelevance of the old media. They shouted from the rooftops that the old media no longer controlled the narrative.
And the old media had its revenge. They not only nominated their candidate of choice, Barack Obama, without vetting him in any way, they then proceeded to nominate their Republican candidate of choice, John McCain, by magnifying the flaws of all the other candidates and touting his "momentum" in the primaries. Then they proceeded to elect Obama by tearing down McCain piece by piece.
In this election cycle, the battle isn't between the old media and the new media anymore. It is between the Tea Party and the GOP establishment. Since 2010, the Tea Party has declared victory; they've decided that they now handle the rudder of the conservative movement, thanks to the election of candidates like Allan West, Marco Rubio and Scott Walker.
But the establishment GOP sees the Tea Party as a threat, for two reasons. First, they think that the Tea Party is more interested in principle than victory. They look at Sharron Angle and Christine O'Donnell and they see a descent back to the losing days of Barry Goldwater. In this, they may be right. Many of those in the Tea Party would rather run principled candidates who lose than elect Democrat-lites who proceed to corrupt both the government and conservatism itself from within. In this view, at least there will be clear lines of blame when liberals drive the ship of state into the jagged rocks of reality.
Second, the establishment GOP is not aligned with the philosophy of the Tea Party. They like the philosophy of a Democrat-lite: more efficient, effective government, but not necessarily a smaller one. This is the philosophy of Mitt Romney, who rips Rick Perry for stating that Social Security is a Ponzi scheme (which it is), who established a health care mandate in the state of Massachusetts, who supports Obama's continued nationalization of education, whose tax cutting talk is weak tea at best.
Even more than the Democrat-lite philosophy, establishment Republicans like winning. Was Ronald Reagan running in these primaries, the establishment GOP would attempt to dump him for Romney, the same way they tried to dump Reagan for George H.W. Bush in 1980.
The problem, of course, is that the establishment GOP philosophy results not in victory but in tremendous losses. When conservatism is politically inconvenient, it sometimes wins (see Reagan) and it sometimes loses (see Goldwater). But when conservatism embraces the politics of convenience, it always loses. If the establishment GOP succeeds in nominating Mitt Romney, it will be able to add another black mark to its long record of failure -- and, even worse, it will have co-opted the greatest Constitutionalist movement in a century for its own pathetic purposes.
COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM.

13 Comments
Howard McCallister
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 9:32 AM
From what I currently see in our political arena today is we only have lawyers, rich businessmen, CEO'S etc. running for office. All the average citizen's know what needs to be done, and not done, but it never gets done. I think we need to get back to the basics. We need to support both small and large business's if we want jobs. Yes they make a lot of money, but they also generate jobs we all need. We need to get the business back in America, like it used to be. We are the greatest country in the world, bar none and we can still do it here and compete. Even if it costs more aren't we better off than sending it elsewhere. Give business support on taxes and areas they need help with and watch this country grow to where it used to be. Where have our morals, and value's gone. We n.eed to give the running of our familys and schools back to the parents and teachers, not government. What the hell has happened to us. We need to straighten this out now or we are all doomed. We need to put the money in the right places and quit wasteing it. Our national debt is at insane levels and still rising, this has to stop. When we build schools today we make them look like prisions, not schools. Whst is wrong with having windows in schools, where our children can look at nature for a break. When our children go to school today why don't they learn? To be honest a lot of it starts at the home, and some parents are to busy to work with their children, and don't care. This may be not intended, but that is the result. Children need to be displined in school and at home, but not abused. In our schools today, kids do not respect our teachers, nor do the parents in a lot of cases, why?We need someone running this country with common sense. Life is not a free ride, this is another concept we need to understand. If people need some education to get another job, that is a area we need to apply money and support to. We need to set a time limit on education support and if you goof of you loose. We need to take of our own house befor we help others. Another thing that is probably the most important of all. IN GOD WE TRUST. That is what this country was founded on and rightfully so. We need to get back to our values. We also need to end this racial thing. Remember 9/11 and how we became one in a heartbeat, that shows you what matters, and at times like that we become one, and all the bickering etc. goes away. The color of your skin should't even matter. Slavery is over and we need to get past that as a country. If you read this, thanks for your time. I know it was lenghthy but necessarRemember we still are Amerians first and we should be proud of that, and never forget it. A lot of men and women have died for our freedom, respect that, it is the ultimate sacrifice.God Bless America
wjmccrindle
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 10:27 AM
Stop electing politicians, who have never developed a job or done anything in the private sector. Herman Cain has an outstanding track record of accomplishment. Time to vote for accomplishment and experience over political rhetoric.
K-Tea
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 11:44 AM
Great piece right on target. The primary tumor of the Beltway cancer isn't the Democrat Party, it's the corrupted and compromised two-party system. While the leftist Democrats will certainly drive us to further ruin, the old GOP establishment will be a willing co-pilot.We must have statesmen and women who will actually uphold and defend the Constitution, not the SYSTEM. Some major and very painful changes are necessary if the Republic is to survive..... on both sides of the aisle!
RudyT
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 12:24 PM
On Romney: "He seems to be everybody's second choice. He is few people's first choice. And that is a major problem for him."In terms of the general election, it's only a problem if someone's first choice is to re-elect Obama.None of the candidates make me faint or send chills up my leg (except maybe Sarah Palin...but for different reasons...he he).I hate to boil it down to such a silly level, but I will vote for anyone BUT Obama. I'd enthusiastically vote for McCain if my choices were McRINO or the current inhabitant of the White House.An imperfect "Republican" is still vastly better than what we have now. I'm still looking forward to 2016 - some of our new conservative "stars" will be ready for the limelight. It won't matter a bit if we let Obama have another 4 years to deliver the killing blow to our nation.
Galen McPherson
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 12:43 PM
I think that one of the flaws [or fallacies] of our current system is that we are electing an individual; it seems to me that the Republican party would be much much better served by crafting a solid platform that will secure the support of a winning majority, and then identifying and promoting an electable candidate that is committed to implementing this platform, as part [leader] of a team. Eliminate, over a period of two years, the Departments of Education and Energy, as well as the EPA, bit by bit, allowing ANY company so inclined to bid on maintaining specific services of those Departments. If there is a true need, there will be true consumer money behind it; if it is a government sump, it will become evident. Money follows value.Abandon government funding for alternative energy sources- if there is sufficient interest, there will be sufficient money. If alternative energy were financially/economically viable, you couldn't stop the flood of investment capital that would hit the system. Repeal Obamacare, and return the healthcare decision to the individual through a free market enterprise.The time for depending on personal charm and charisma as predictors of success are behind us, and looking for a pretty face or gift of gab, is what got us into this mess. Platform FIRST, candidate committed top secure it-- and start with the Constitution, repeal of the 16th Amendment, and establishing 9-9-9 as the fundamental economic engine behind this platform.
Tex Horn
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 12:51 PM
@K-Tea: Couldn't have said it better myself!@ RudyT: Yes, my friend, it will matter more than a "bit" if the punk in the White House is reelected for four more years. Look what he has done in three short years...leveled America to Europe's level, and worse. I agree that an "imperfect" Republican is probably better than the punkster, but as someone, said, now is the time to choose the "right" person, not the next in line, as in Romney.
David Reiter
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 3:53 PM
Mr. Shapiro. Thank you. Your last line is the kicker. I wish every voter in America would read it. I wish every voter would hold still long enough to let it sink in.
Rob in FL
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 4:02 PM
Hear, hear, Counselor! Your article is spot-on! Thank you for articulating so well what many of us are thinking. I hope that the establishment fat cats in the RNC and on Wall Street wise up and throw their support behind a candidate that the people can trust... and no professional politician fits that description. Maybe that explains why Herman Cain is getting so much grass-roots support, while the MSM and the RNC ignore him.
Jeremy
Wednesday, October 5, 2011 at 4:38 PM
This article hits the nail on the head. My only disagreement is with the statement that Romney "... seems to be everybody's second choice." He certainly isn't my second (or even third) choice. Of course, like everybody else here, I'd vote for a dead cat over Obama, but that's not the point. If ever there was a time for conservatives to refuse to "settle" for a lame moderate, this is the time.
Diana
Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 12:34 PM
What a great commentary~! For the record, I emphatically disagree with the notion that we should be 'good little gop-ers, and vote for whomever the party elites (or media) decide should be the nominee. I am tired of voting for the lesser of two evils. We have the opportunity now to do a right thing....nominate and elect a man of principal and integrity who values and will uphold the Constitution.....to truly and unequivocally begin the return of this great country to the ideals of our foundation. Ron Paul is this man.If we fail, if we settle for second best, if we maintain the status quo with a candidate chosen for us by those wishing only to maintain their own power and control, we have lost.....and what we have lost is more than just this election.
Diana
Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 12:45 PM
What a great commentary~! For the record, I emphatically disagree with the notion that we should be 'good little gop-ers, and vote for whomever the party elites (or media) decide should be the nominee. I am tired of voting for the lesser of two evils. We have the opportunity now to do a right thing....nominate and elect a man of principal and integrity who values and will uphold the Constitution.....to truly and unequivocally begin the return of this great country to the ideals of our foundation. Ron Paul is this man.If we fail, if we settle for second best, if we maintain the status quo with a candidate chosen for us by those wishing only to maintain their own power and control, we have lost.....and what we have lost is more than just this election.
Larry
Friday, October 7, 2011 at 8:18 AM
This is me. Many of those in the Tea Party would rather run principled candidates who lose than elect Democrat-lites who proceed to corrupt both the government and conservatism itself from within. In this view, at least there will be clear lines of blame when liberals drive the ship of state into the jagged rocks of reality. McCain takes us the same place just takes longer and conservatives take the blame. The RNC like so many big organizations is more interested in its continued existence than it is in fulfilling its purpose.
Hummer
Monday, October 10, 2011 at 11:56 AM
Personally, I WILL NOT vote for Mitt Romeny! I refuse to hold my nose like the last time when McCain was running for President. I felt like I was voting for the lesser of two evils! Romney has too much baggage, starting with RomneyCare the precurser of ObabaCare! He's a flip flopper and a Demorat-Lite. Again, I will not vote for him and neither will a great number of my friends!