Image via Conservative Treehouse
Sundance has must-read history lesson starting with the Tea
Party movement in 2009, its metamorphosis into the MAGA movement, and why the
GOP continues to break its promises and obstruct President Trump’s initiatives.
A few extracts from Sundance’s history lesson at Conservative Treehouse:
An interesting pattern of seemingly
disconnected political stories is beginning to show signs of a common
continuity. In the bigger of the big pictures seven words continue to set
the baseline: “There are trillions of dollars at stake”.
When the common sense Tea Party
movement formed in 2009 and 2010 it contained a monumentally frustrated
grassroots electorate, and the scale of the movement caught the professional
republican party off-guard. When Donald Trump ran for the office of the
presidency he essentially did the same thing; he disrupted the apparatus of the
professional republican party.
The difference between those two
examples is one was from the bottom up, and the second was from the top
down. However, the commonality in the two forces resulted in the 2016
victory.
. . .
A few years pass and the issues
that spurred the Tea Party movement remained unresolved. In 2015 Donald
Trump taps in to that exact same Tea Party frustration toward the control
authority within one-half of the DC UniParty; again, the professional
republican apparatus was disrupted. The movement re-branded and now the
MAGA movement wins the presidency.
So it should not come as a surprise
to see an eerily similar response from within the GOP toward the new threat; the
Trump presidency. After all, there are two constants in an ever changing
universe: (1) “NeverTrump” didn’t go away; and (2) the Bush-clan, or GOP old
guard, will never accept losing power.
The professional republicans and
the professional democrats, ie. “the uniparty”, have a common enemy in
President Trump. The vulgarian leader of the deplorable coalition never
asked for permission; never paid the indulgency fees; never attended the
necessary cloistered club meetings paying homage; and never offered the
indulgent team of political elites terms for his takeover.
Thus Donald Trump, just like the
Tea Party, would never be accepted.
. . .
There are no MAGA lobbying groups
in Washington DC advocating for policies that benefit economic
nationalism. On this objective President Donald Trump stands alone.
We don’t need a third party in
Washington DC, we actually need a second one.
I no longer think of the GOP as the “party of Stupid.” I think of the GOP instead as the “Party of Bought” -- that would be the (R) half of the “Uniparty.”
Read the whole thing here.
# # #