Opinion

Glenn Cook

Reid expects Tea Party to fade away

Posted: Aug. 14, 2011 | 2:03 a.m.
Updated: Aug. 14, 2011 | 9:30 p.m.

Can Harry Reid wait out the Tea Party?

The Senate majority leader seems to think so.

Reid sat down with more than 30 Review-Journal staffers Friday afternoon for an hour-long Q&A session at the newspaper's offices. The bulk of the back and forth was dedicated to federal spending and how Congress might tame exploding budget deficits.

Reid blamed everything that ails Washington and the nation on Republicans. He slammed the GOP for its refusal to go along with tax increases as part of this month's debt-ceiling deal, saying hard-core fiscal conservatives are making it impossible to strike a long-term deal that slows the growth of the national debt.

"(Senate Minority Leader) Mitch McConnell has done a good job bringing the country to a standstill," Reid said.

The reason Republicans have drawn such a deep line in the sand on tax increases, of course, is the Tea Party movement. The populist uprising that was born from Washington's bailouts achieved critical mass after Democrats decided to start spending like no government before. The stimulus. The ObamaCare overreach. Budget deficits that made President George W. Bush look like a piker.

Democrats were tossed from office in record numbers last November. That groundswell is shaping the 2012 campaign.

But Reid doesn't expect it to last.

"The Tea Party was the result of a terrible economy," he said. "I've said that many times, and I believe that."

"That (the Tea Party) will pass. They will lose a number of seats next year."

Reid has amassed his considerable power by never underestimating his adversaries. And he has been known to throw out strategic fibs to create misdirection.

However, Reid left the indelible impression Friday that as long as he's leading the Senate Democrats, the Tea Party agenda is dead on arrival in his chamber. In exchange for a modicum of reduced growth in federal spending, Reid said someone will have to pay more. There will be no reductions and entitlement reforms without tax increases. He singled out the rich and oil companies as especially deserving of punishment.

Perhaps Reid is still savoring his November re-election victory over Tea Party darling Sharron Angle. Perhaps he's oblivious to the number of Democrats, in both House and Senate races, sprinting to the right to boost their 2012 chances. Perhaps it's just wishful thinking.

But there's no way the Tea Party is going away -- certainly not before the 2012 elections, and certainly not when the national debt is projected to shoot past $20 trillion before the end of the decade. Anyone who minimizes the Tea Party by extension minimizes the massive spending problems that created it in the first place.

Reid rationalizes that those problems are all Republicans' fault. He opened Friday's group interview with a two-minute reminder that George W. Bush is responsible for the country's spending and America's economic woes. After all, Bush inherited a projected $7 trillion budget surplus from Bill Clinton. (Never mind that Clinton served his final six years over a Republican-controlled Congress. They had nothing to do with that period of spending restraint.)

There's no denying that Bush did little to rein in the fat-and-happy Congresses that shoveled out the pork during his first six years in office. That deficit spending did incalculable political damage, allowing Democrats to position themselves to the right of Republicans on fiscal policy and falsely run as conservatives in 2008.

But budget deficits under Bush were in the $100 billion to $400 billion range, mostly related to the post 9/11 wars. The Obama administration -- working with a Democratic House and Senate its first two years -- set the course for budget deficits of more than $1 trillion into the distant future. Obama is on course to pile up more debt in three years than Bush did in eight.

Democrats -- led by Reid -- now own this country's debt problem and its struggling economy. The 2012 election will be a referendum on Obama and Reid, not Bush. The Tea Party will see to that.

Among other interesting things Reid had to say Friday:

-- Echoing the sentiment of other Democrats and devoted Keynesians, Reid said the failed stimulus just wasn't big enough. "I had $100 billion in infrastructure development in the bill, but I needed three Republican votes. Arlen Specter, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins made me get rid of it."

-- Nevada's redistricting mess, sent to the courts when the Legislature gave up redrawing congressional and legislative districts, will probably "take at least another five months" to clean up. That means candidates might not know what districts they live in until January or February, with filing for office beginning in March. Fundraising for legislative candidates, in particular, will be hurt by such a delay.

Mercifully, no one on the Review-Journal staff asked Reid about green energy.

Glenn Cook (gcook@reviewjournal.com) is a Review-Journal editorial writer.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. Scary Harry Sep. 11, 2011 | 4:47 a.m. Report Abuse

    Harry Reid will be maggot poop long before the Tea Party disappears.

  2. CrinVegas Sep. 2, 2011 | 1:18 p.m. Report Abuse

    The Tea Party, the biggest bunch of ignorant lunatics to live in this country, will fade away, but not until they attempt to destroy everything this country has accomplished. They've taken over the Republican Party, and Boehner is too much of a wimp to stand up to them. And, by the way, tax and spend is the only way to recovery. You don't have to believe me. Ask any economist.

  3. LVSpartiate Aug. 17, 2011 | 2:19 p.m. Report Abuse

    The Tea Party fading away is as likely as the triple headed monster of Obama-Reid and Pelosi reducing the gov't spending parasite. It will not happen. The thing he's too dumb to realize is that he helped create it. Even by his logic, the terrible economy improving is not going to happen with the ill fated policies of tax and spend, QE1-3 and running trillion dollar deficits on programs that are crap. We can only hope he will fade away from his role as majority (cough) leader. He is not a leader.

  4. rich.coleman Aug. 16, 2011 | 6:27 a.m. Report Abuse

    Mr. Reid, your comments come as no surprise to the largest voter segment in the United States: the hard working, tax paying men and women who run their households and their families with financial responsibility and not with smarmy backroom, or "car salesman" morals. Sir, you do not even know what the tea party really is, but i do believe you soon will find out. They are US Mr. Reid; a completely different animal than you, and your lies and convenient truths wont change that. The more you lie and steal our money, the sooner you will go.Bye now.

  5. S.F..Canyon Aug. 16, 2011 | 1:04 a.m. Report Abuse

    And meanwhile on planet earth, the rest of us are still trying to determine just what kind of dope you people were smoking when you sent this rabid lunatic back to Washington D.C. to continue attempting (through sheer Herculean stupidity) to damage this nation. Someone needs to throw him and his supporters a beating...with a clue by four.
    WOW I COULD'VE HAD A V8!

  6. Jerry S..Dickinson Aug. 15, 2011 | 10:56 p.m. Report Abuse

    I have been a Nevada resident for 55 years. As a longtime resident I feel a certain right to say something about Dirty Harry Reid. He was as crooked as the coast highway when he was in any of his many political positions while in Nevada. He has become corruption king while in D.C.
    Dirty Harry has the elections wired. If not litterally then through "vote herding" of union employees in the Las Vegas casino industry.
    As a Nevadan I am just waiting for the day Dirty Harry fades away. That will be the day to dance in the streets. That will be the day to have a statewide teaparty. I will buy the tea.
    Good bye dirty old "clean face"

  7. dlc41350 Aug. 15, 2011 | 3:40 p.m. Report Abuse

    The title of the article should be "Reid hopes Tea Party to fade away.

  8. Rick.Giancola Aug. 15, 2011 | 12:53 p.m. Report Abuse

    Harry Reid is getting up there in age so maybe - (God willing) he will 'fade away' very soon....

  9. Dick.Casey Aug. 15, 2011 | 12:31 p.m. Report Abuse

    You don't have it right, Harry. The tea party is the consensus of the general population of the country. It is a movement, not a PARTY. This movement is telling you politicians to cut the debt. The Democrat voters are receiving the dole provided by the Democrat debt and obviously will vote for the Democrat representatives. Since the economy is in a mess, jobs are scarce and costs of living is increasing, even the Democrat supporters will see the light and vote to change the thinking in Washington.

  10. kimdi01 Aug. 15, 2011 | 9:27 a.m. Report Abuse

    Just remember Las Vegas, you put him there and you have done all you can to keep him there. All this dumb denier does is your fault. The Tea party is nothing more than taxpayers concerned because this Bozo is in the Senate and continues to berate the taxpayers, spend thier money like it was his own and follow his leader in the White House. Thank you Las Vegas and Nevada. Because of you and your intelligence we have to listen to Harry Reid and be subject to his Marxist ways.To ay the least, we do NOT appreciate you.

Read All Comments

Saturday, May 26, 2012
Clear Clear, 59° Weather Forecast