Kaffis Mark V wrote:
RD, I'd love to see sourcing on those claims about the Tea Party split. Are we talking about articles with a strong undertone of slander and undermining, or serious polls with good statistical practices and wide samples? It wouldn't surprise me if there was a heavy mix of Christians and pro-lifers in the Tea Party alongside the serious libertarian types, but my experiences with it would lead me to be very surprised if those Christians and pro-lifers were predominantly politicizing their faith. And I have no idea where your articles are getting aggressive military stances from when reporting on the Tea Party.
Sorry for the delayed response, Kaffis. My view of the Tea Parties is a gestalt formed over the last year or so of reading articles, catching the highlights of polls, etc., so I had to go digging for specific references to provide. Anyway, here are a few links:
NY Times / CBS poll from April. Some of the relevant highlights are: (i) Tea Partiers favor Palin (social con) over Ron Paul (libertarian) by more than a 2 to 1 margin; (ii) 40% want to restrict legal immigration and 82% think illegal immigration is very serious problem (more of a social con than libertarian perspective); (iii) 40% oppose any legal recognition of gay couples; and (iv) 77% think abortion should be more restricted or outright banned. However, contrary to my premise, this poll and others that I found definitely show that economics issues are providing the passion - 78% said economic issues were the biggest problem facing the country, while only 14% said social issues were the most important.
That said, there's a difference between what people say their concerns are in polls and what they actually seem to care about when they decide which politicians to support. Accordingly,
Tea Party-backed politicians have been one of the biggest influences on my impression of what Tea Partiers care about. People like Palin, Beck, DeMint, Angle, O'Donnell, Rubio, etc. are all solidly in the cultural conservative camp. And again, I think it's noteworthy that Tea Partiers like Palin so much more than Paul.
And here's
Hitchens with what I think is an insightful commentary on the social/cultural currents in the Tea Party (at least the Beck/Palin part of it).
Lastly, here are a few Cato blog posts that discuss the question of a split between the libertarian and social con wings:
Libertarians, Independents, and Tea Parties Was it a Church Picnic or a Freedom Rally?Social Conservatives Left Behind?Anyway, my take-away from the reconsideration your question prompted is - The Tea Parties are indeed a mix of social cons and libertarians, but the actual policy issues on which Tea Party supporters focus really do tend to be economic rather social/cultural (other than immigration), and hence the "split" is more nascent than actual. That said, there is a diffuse cultural ressentiment underpinning much of the movement, which is what explains the Tea Party support for social con and culture war rhetoric from folks like Palin, O'Donnell, Angle, DeMint, etc. What happens next - whether the Tea Parties and their preferred candidates focus on economic issues in practice or mix in more social con policies - will depend on what the high-profile leaders do and whether the rank-and-file choose to follow them.