Mark Tapscott

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Mark Tapscott: What next for the Middle America Rebellion of 2009?


September 14, 2009

(Credit Frank Senatore)
A day before the event, organizers said a mere 20,000 or so folks had registered for Saturday’s amazing 9/12 march on Washington to protest out-of-control government. What they got was hundreds of thousands of  intensely patriotic people who came to the nation’s capitol to yell “Stop!”
 
Whatever the number of attendees, this was possibly the most significant Washington protest since the civil rights movement’s epic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. Indeed, about all that was lacking was a charismatic leader like Dr. Martin Luther King to deliver an “I have a dream” address for the ages.
 
As the 1963 gathering meant America’s Blacks would no longer accept second-class citizenship, Saturday’s march was the leading edge of the fabled Silent Majority that is silent no longer. That ought to give President Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reason to sit down and rethink everything they think they know about the American people.
 
And the same applies, but even more so, for Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steel, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, and House Minority Leader John Boehner.
 
To hasten that much-needed reappraisal by official Washington, here are some clues: Most Americans   never were as gullible as you thought, they just didn’t pay you that much attention. They are now, as never before. They no longer have an unbending loyalty to any person or political party in Congress or the White House. And they aren’t going to be silent any longer.
 
Things are different now. As Shannon Love noted on the Chicago Boyz blog:
 
“Getting hundreds of thousands of kids, the professionally unemployed, and government workers to show up isn’t that hard (especially if someone buys the bus tickets). Getting two million middle-class, middle-aged people with jobs, careers, children and businesses is way, way more impressive.
 
“We can safely assume that for every individual who made it to the protest that there are dozens of people whose grown-up obligations prevented them from attending.
 
“That thought should keep Obama and Pelosi up at night.”
 
Congratulations to the 9/12 organizers, including Fox News’ Glen Beck, FreedomWorks.org, Tea Party Patriots, Resist.Net, and a huge informal coalition of conservative, libertarian and populist citizen groups across the country.
 
Now, the crucial question is what comes next for Middle America Rebellion of 2009. Two weeks ago in this space, I suggested the primary focus should be on replacing Congress in 2010 by electing candidates from either or any party who support a basic platform that earns them a Tea Party endorsement, or seal of approval.
 
While I didn’t then and don’t now claim to have a magic formula for making that happen, I suggested that two essential elements are a constitutional amendment for term limits and a binding pledge to balance the federal budget without tax hikes.
 
A regular reader of this column, who prefers to remain anonymous, has suggested a third possibility for a foundational element – a federal recall. There is no recall provision in the U.S. Constitution. But recalls are fairly common at the state level, with the most famous likely that of California Gov. Gray Davis in 2003.
 
Recalls are associated with initiatives and referendums, two reforms associated with the Progressives of the early 20th century. More recently, there is a renewed interest on the Right in these processes, as seen in the Ballotpedia.org web site, and the work of Paul Jacobs and the Citizens in Charge Foundation.
 
The Founders would reject a recall because their intent was to blunt and deflect transient majorities from being too easily able to impose their will on a vulnerable minority, With  representatives facing voters every two years, a recall on them would probably be extraneous.
 
But the Founders never envisioned a deeply entrenched political class using its accumulated powers of incumbency to hamstring a vulnerable majority. Now, as the Middle America Rebellion of 2009 grows more self-aware and focused via the Internet, a way to recall a senator or a president might be worth a look.
 
Just having such a national discussion will have a salutary effect.
 
Mark Tapscott is editorial page editor of The Washington Examiner and proprietor of Tapscott’s Copy Desk blog on washingtonexaminer.com.
 
 


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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

morgan

Sep 14, 2009

Discussion of recall is appropriate at this point. We are witnessing the trashing of both the constitution and the majority of Americans by an unresponsive and abusive administration, its congressional allies (supposedly our elected representatives), and corrupt interest groups.

 

Ellen

Sep 14, 2009

I think we should have another demonstration on November 2 (exactly one year before the 2010 midterm elections), to remind our legislators that we voters have as much power over their future as they have over ours! We need to keep building up the pressure on them!

 

Dave C

Sep 15, 2009

I think we would be better off beginning a takeover of the Republican party apparatus at the county level. If we can find a way to coordinate efforts and leverage our momentum, we can create a party that actually represents the views of their constituents.

 

Mitchell Vickers

Sep 15, 2009

The 9/12ers had a right to be angry but they picked the wrong target. Instead of jumping on Obama, they should be angry at the greedy insurance companies and Wall Street bankers who have left too many Americans up a creek without a paddle, and the hypocrits who have turned the Republican Party into a gang of white Southern discontents with no new ideas. It's OK to be angry, but the anger must be directed at the right targets. Americans voted in Obama and the Democrats last fall because they were fed up with Bush's eight years of mismanagement and mkstakes.

 

Lazarus

Sep 15, 2009

"into a gang of white Southern discontents"

You keep on thinking like this and you're going to wake up shocked after the next election cycle.

"eight years of mismanagement"

Exactly and you can imagine the anger as that eight years of mismanagement is surpassed in less than 8 months.

 

tx nana

Sep 15, 2009

I attended the dc march and it was amazing. Numerous police we spoke to said it was at least 2 million and all agreed it was larger than the inauguration of Obama. All 50 states were represented and officials & attendees were amazed at the politeness and cleanliness of the crowd. I witnessed numerous side streets just as full as pennsylvania ave but am yet to see this reported. We were not allowed on the national mall & therefore routed to side roads. The poor journalism on our events merely adds to our ranks.

 

TooStupidToVote

Sep 15, 2009

Umm, what exactly was "middle America" protesting, and if they are a majority don't you think we'd have Winkin' Sarah Palin as VP?

I mean, we had bithers, we had neo-Confederates, consipracists of every stripe and color all to protest what, exactly? They supported a man who expanded government, ran up the national debt, started two unwinnable and immoral wars and now they are the start of some sort of movement?

Sorry, Charlie. This movement has been around since the birth of our nation. Willfully ignorant tools shilling for corporations, screaming about issues they don't understand, can't identify and that make no sense at all.

One president specialized in stealing directly from the national treasury to enrich his coporate cronies. The other is attempting to invest in all Americans and we get abject stupidity of the sort that was on display last Saturday. We haven't seen that much stupid gathered in one place since Palin's acceptance speech.

 

But he DID lie!

Sep 15, 2009

Yeah, you just keep telling all of that to yourself.

 

Rob

Sep 16, 2009

I suggest adopting an idea I heard Newt express a while back. Pass a law or amendment that says that someone running for elected office MUST raise at least 50% of his/her campaign funds from people/organizations which are physically located within that particular office's geographical boundaries.

 


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