1. It wasn’t long ago that John Boehner, who was then the Speaker of the House, said that Barack Obama would not get another nickel out of the US Congress until federal spending was under control.
2. Boehner agreed with the president about the need for fiscal stimulus to juice up a national economy still reeling from the 2007-2008 panic.

But we can’t do it, he said in 2011.

“We’re broke.”

politico.com/story/2011/02/…
3. Bloomberg reported Monday that the current deficit is growing faster than predicted. Sarah McGregor wrote that it “grew to $866.8 billion in the first 10 months of the fiscal year, up 27 percent from the same period a year earlier …
4. SM: That’s wider than last fiscal year’s shortfall of $779 billion—which was the largest federal deficit since 2012.” bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
5. The Congressional Budget Office, which does all the number crunching, predicts that the budget deficit will be over $1 trillion by 2022. Remember: “budget deficits” are different from the “national debt.”
6. Deficits are parts. Debts are wholes. So the $1 trillion in “budget deficits” is on top of a “national debt,” which is about $22 trillion.
7. When the budget deficit was less, the Republicans said we’re broke. When it was more, the Republicans said nothing. Let’s put this another way:
8. When a black Democratic president wanted more money from the Congress, when the country needed it, the GOP said no. When a white Republican president wanted more money, when the country didn’t need it, the Republicans said by all means yes! Why the change?
9. The conventional wisdom is that Trump changed the GOP, especially its Tea Party faction, so that it doesn’t care anymore about deficits & debt. Trump’s “economic nationalism” uprooted the old economic orthodoxy that held that Washington governs best when it governs least.
10. Post-Trump, there’s room for state intervention into the economy (think: tariffs). Trump’s impact has been so great that so-called “movement conservatives” have tailored their ways of thinking to his, dubbing their new approach “national conservatism.” stoehr.substack.com/p/the-folly-of…
11. But the conventional wisdom is based on a lie.

There would not be a President Trump without first a Tea Party.
12. We remember the Tea Party as principled rogues committed to the rule of law, rugged individualism, limited government and fiscal responsibility.
13. But we remember these characteristics because that’s what Tea Party apologists said when they rationalized its goals to the press and public. Its agenda was clear to anyone who was not white and to social scientists who took the trouble to understand what it wanted.
14. Rule of law, rugged individualism, limited government and fiscal responsibility—these were means to an end, but those who characterized them as ends unto themselves were delusional, lying or both.
15. The Tea Party really was an ideological revolution inside the Republican Party, according to Vanessa Williamson, Theda Skocpol, and John Coggin. In the past, the problem for conservatives was the very existence of federal entitlement programs like Social Security & Medicare.
16. The old guard, as you might call them, was bent on unraveling the expansion of the US government that took place in the 1930s (New Deal) and 1960s (Great Society). But the vanguard was different. scholar.harvard.edu/files/williams…
17. For them, the problem wasn’t entitlements.

For them, the problem was **who was getting what**.
18. This was always historically true, but after the election of America’s first black president, the who in that question was of utmost importance.
19. Opposition to Obamacare was not opposition to “government-run health care.” It was opposition to “‘handouts’ to ‘undeserving’ groups, the definition of which seems heavily influenced by racial and ethnic stereotypes,” Williamson, Skocpol, and Coggin said in 2011.
VW, TS, and JC: Tea Party concerns exist within the context of ***anxieties about racial, ethnic, and generational changes in American society***. Previous scholars, including Martin Gilens, have noted connections between racial stereotyping
21. VW, TS, and JC: "and opposition to parts of US social provision, particularly “welfare” for poor mothers. … We explain how Tea Party reactions and attitudes fit into this picture." scholar.harvard.edu/files/williams…
22. Tea Party Republicans did not want a black president to act in the interest of all Americans, because not all Americans were “deserving” in their view.
23. Indeed, the more a black president insisted on serving all Americans—whether via reforms to health care, etc.—the more Tea Party Republicans perceived him as giving away free stuff to black and brown people who were not, by dint of being black and brown, “real Americans.”
24. It takes just one step more to get to where we are now, as the administration slaps punitive new conditions of legal immigrants, tcf.org/content/commen…
25. as border agents shoot rubber bullets across the Rio Grande at picnicking families, ktsm.com/news/border-re…
26. as states demand work for food stamps, as children are confiscated from mothers, as fathers are disappeared, cnn.com/2019/08/13/us/…
27. and as a Trump official says the Statue of Liberty should read: “Give me your tired and your poor who can stand on their own two feet, and who will not become a public charge."

cbsnews.com/news/statue-of…
28. In other words, there is an unbroken ideological chain connecting “we’re broke” to “build the wall.”

The difference is how we’re seeing it.
29. Back then, we saw the Tea Party as a legitimate political force in the constitutional order. Sure, adherents were extremist, but as Goldwater once said, “extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice.”
30. Now, however, it should be clear the Tea Party was a nascent fascist movement that exploited the tools, rights and privilege of an open liberal democracy to take over a Republican Party collapsed on itself in the wake of war and recession,
31. and that paved the way for a fascist American president. It should be clear by now, if we take this to its final conclusion, that the GOP has become a party of illegitimate politics.
32. In retrospect, the Tea Party was a nascent fascist movement.

stoehr.substack.com/p/from-were-br…
33. Hiya! Please don't unroll. Today’s edition goes out to everyone. But please, pretty please, if you can afford to, subscribe ($6/mo.) and support my work! Just click on the red button. Many thanks! —JS

stoehr.substack.com/subscribe?utm_…
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