Local Tea Party Leader:It’s All About Beating Obama

Published in Politiken
(Denmark) on 9 January 2012
by Thomas Berndt (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Anne Thye. Edited by Katya Abazajian  .
The Tea Party movement revolutionized American politics, yet has not dominated the Republican presidential race.

Tim Carter is pottering around a tiny hall, smiling in the posh hotel Churches Landing in Meredith, New Hampshire. In a few minutes, the presidential candidate Newt Gingrich will speak at the election meeting arranged by the local tea party group that Tim Carter is co-chairman for.

Up until the last second, people are flooding into the room, and two times the hotel employees have to bring more chairs in, yet there aren’t seats enough for all.

In the polls, Newt Gingrich might stand to receive less than 10 percent of the votes, but Carter still declares himself optimistic.

An Opponent to Obama

Tomorrow, the primary elections are coming to New Hampshire. As the second state in the country, the voters have to decide who of the seven republican presidential candidates they want to lead their party and challenge Obama in next autumn's election.

Less than a year and a half ago, when the mid-term election took place — the election for the American Congress — the popular, conservative Tea Party movement was a prominent power factor. Senators and Congress members who had served for many years were kicked out, because the grassroots did not think they would be capable of saving enough on the public budget or respecting the Constitution sufficiently.

At the presidential election, the Tea Party movement will no longer be a feared entity. Congress member Michele Bachmann rose strongly in the late summer polls, when she won a test election in Iowa, mostly with support from the Tea Party movement. So when Iowa last week held a proper election as the first state in the country, and Bachmann finished last, she chose to withdraw her candidacy.

The governor of Texas, Rick Perry, regularly draws attention to his support from the grassroots movement, but this backing is fluid, mildly put. He only did a little better than Bachmann in Iowa, and in the polls of the next states to vote he is set to finish in the bottom.

This is Only About Obama

This brings us back to Tim Carter, who is giving out handshakes in the hotel hall with three great scintillating chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. His preferred candidate is Newt Gingrich, the previous Speaker of the United States House of Representatives.

“This election is not about finding the Republican presidential candidate, but about beating Obama,” Tim Carter explains, as the hall is filling up.

The audience this night spans over all ages, but you probably would not offend anyone by saying Tim Carter fits in just fine with his well-groomed silver grey side parting. The local Tea Party leader is of the opinion that Newt Gingrich has the right experience to negotiate with Democrats and Republicans in order to obtain results. Moreover he respects the Constitution — a key issue in the Tea Party camp. “Therefore Tea Party members will be fascinated by Newt. Look how many are here tonight,” he says with the sound of rock-country in the background — a classic backdrop to an American political rally.

“The Tea Party movement is more powerful and better organized than it was at the midterm election,” according to Tim Carter’s own evaluation.

Fear of Repeating the Last Campaign

In the past couple of months, conservative powers in the Republican Party have warned against repeating the fatal error from 2008, when John McCain, the most moderate candidate, won. At the moment Mitt Romney is the big favorite for an all-over win, but despite winning Iowa, he only had the backing of 25 percent of voters, and only eight votes separated him from the runner-up, Rick Santorum.

According to the polls, Romney will reap no more than 35 percent of votes in the next states, New Hampshire and South Carolina, but still he is in the lead.

The conservative candidates fight to be... well, the most conservative, which even Mitt Romney describes himself as. And so the Republicans will likely again choose a candidate who is moderate on paper, despite the party being predominantly conservative. Nevertheless, Tim Carter still believes that the conservative forces within the party will be able to rise to the challenge of beating former Massachusetts governor Romney. “We need someone who is a little moderate, but also a little to the right, and that is what Newt is. Romney is simply too moderate,” he believes. “Romney, so to speak, didn’t win Iowa. Voters pointed at other candidates with a ratio of three to one,” Tim Carter notes.

In the Hotel in Meredith, Newt Gingrich is getting a decent round of applause, and after the meeting, people line up in a long queue to shake the skilled politician’s hand. However, that doesn’t change the fact that his ratings in New Hampshire are low, and if he does not do well in South Carolina, he is probably out of the race to become the Republican presidential candidate — Tea Party support or not.

*Editor's Note: quotes in this article, accurately translated, could not be verified.


Lokal Tea Party-leder: Det handler kun om at slå Obama

HADEOBJEKT. Barack Obama er de konservative republikaneres alt overskyggende mål. - Foto: J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Tim Carter trisser smilende rundt i den lille sal på det fine hotel Churches Landing i Meredith i staten New Hampshire.

Om få minutter vil præsidentkandidat Newt Gingrich tale ved et valgmøde arrangeret af den lokale Tea Party-gruppe, som Tim Carter er co-formand for.

Til sidste sekund strømmer folk til, og de ansatte på hotellet må to gange bære flere stole ind, uden at det skaffer siddepladser til alle.

Det er muligt, at Newt Gingrich i målingerne ligger til under 10 procent af stemmerne i staten, men Carter erklærer sig optimistisk.

En udfordrer til Obama
I morgen er der primærvalg i New Hampshire. Som anden stat i landet skal vælgerne finde ud af, hvem af de syv republikanske præsidentkandidater, de vil have til at blive partiets udfordrer til Barack Obama ved efterårets valg.

Da der for mindre end halvandet år siden var valg til den amerikansk kongres – det såkaldte midtvejsvalg – var den folkelige, konservative Tea Party-bevægelse en prominent magtfaktor.

Mangeårige senatorer og kongresmedlemmer blev sparket ud, fordi græsrødderne ikke mente, at de ville spare nok på de offentlige budgetter eller respektere forfatningen tilstrækkeligt.

Ved præsidentvalget er Tea Party-bevægelsen ikke længere en frygtet størrelse. Kongresmedlem Michelle Bachmann steg kraftigt i målingerne i sensommeren, da hun med netop Tea Party-bevægelsens støtte vandt et prøvevalg i staten Iowa.

Da Iowa så i sidste uge – som første stat i landet – afholdt et regulært valg, endte Bachmann i bunden, og hun har nu trukket sig fra kapløbet.


Texas’ guvernør, Rick Perry, gør også jævnligt opmærksom på, at han er støttet af græsrodsbevægelsen, men opbakningen er mildt sagt flydende.

Han klarede sig kun en smule bedre end Bachmann i Iowa, og i de kommende stater ligger han også i bunden.

Det handler kun om Obama
Det bringer os så tilbage til Tim Carter, der deler håndtryk ud i hotelsalen med de tre kæmpestore glitrende lysekroner i loftet.

Hans foretrukne kandidat er Newt Gingrich, der er tidligere formand for Repræsentanternes Hus.

»Valget handler ikke om ikke om at finde den republikanske præsidentkandidat, men om at slå Obama«, forklarer Tim Carter, mens salen er ved at blive fyldt.

Tilhørerne denne aften dækker alle aldre, men man fornærmer næppe nogen ved at sige, at Tim Carter ikke skiller sig ud med sin velfriserede, sølvgrå sideskilling.


Den lokale Tea Party-leder mener, at Newt Gingrich har den rette erfaring med at forhandle med demokrater og republikanere og nå resultater.

Desuden respekterer han forfatningen – en absolut mærkesag for Tea Party-bevægelsens medlemmer.

»Derfor vil Tea Party-medlemmer være fascineret af Newt. Se hvor mange vi er her i aften«, siger han med lyden af rock-country i baggrunden – en klassisk lydkulisse til et amerikansk valgarrangement.

»Tea Party-bevægelsen er mere magtfuld og bedre organiseret end ved midtvejsvalget«, lyder Tim Carters egen vurdering.

Frygter gentagelse af forrige valgkamp
Konservative kræfter hos republikanerne har de seneste måneder advaret om, at partiet er ved at gentage en fatal fejl fra 2008, hvor John McCain – den mest moderate kandidat vandt.

I øjeblikket er Mitt Romney storfavorit til den samlede sejr, men i Iowa vandt han med blot 25 procent af stemmerne. Det var kun otte stemmer mere end nummer to, Rick Santorum.

Ifølge meningsmålinger høster Romney ikke over 35 procent af stemmerne i de næste stater, New Hampshire og South Carolina, men alligevel fører han.

De konservative kandidater kæmper om at være… ja, den mest konservative, hvilket selv Mitt Romney kalder sig. Og dermed ser republikanerne ud til endnu en gang at vælge en – på papiret – moderat kandidat, selv om partiet er overvejende konservativt.

Tim Carter tror dog på, at partiets konservative kræfter stadig vil nå at samle sig om en udfordrer til den tidligere Massachusetts-guvernør Romney.

»Vi har brug for en, der er lidt moderat, men også lidt til højre, og det er, hvad Newt er. Romney er ganske simpel for moderat«, mener han.

»Romney vandt så at sige ikke Iowa. Vælgerne pegede på andre kandidater med en ratio på 3 til 1«, påpeger Tim Carter.


På hotellet i Meredith høster Newt Gingrich pæne klapsalver, og efter mødet stiller folk sig op i en lang kø for at trykke hånd med den rutinerede politiker.

Det ændrer dog ikke på, at målingerne er spagfærdige i New Hampshire, og hvis han heller ikke klarer sig godt i South Carolina, er han formentlig ude af kapløbet om at blive republikanernes præsidentkandidat – Tea Party-tilhængernes støtte eller ej.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Hong Kong: Trump’s Obsession with the Nobel Peace Prize Is a Farce

Pakistan: The Beginning of the 2nd Cold War

South Africa: Trump’s ‘Self-Styled Pragmatism’ Closing the Door on Ukraine

South Africa: Israel-Palestine Conflict: The Shaky Ceasefire Is Still a Pivotal Window of Opportunity

Trinidad and Tobago: A Time for Diplomacy

Topics

Poland: Trump Ends the Slaughter, Netanyahu’s Problems Remain*

Canada: Carney Is Losing the Trade War

Australia: Benjamin Netanyahu Has Rejected ‘Bibi-Sitting’ Claims but the US Is Watching Israel Closely

Australia: As South-East Asia Reels from Tariffs, Donald Trump’s Flashy ‘Peace’ Deal Falls Short

South Africa: Israel-Palestine Conflict: The Shaky Ceasefire Is Still a Pivotal Window of Opportunity

South Africa: Trump’s ‘Self-Styled Pragmatism’ Closing the Door on Ukraine

Related Articles

Hong Kong: Foreign Media Warn US Brand Reputation Veering toward ‘Collapse’ under Trump Policy Impact

Denmark: The US and Canada Flex Their Muscles in the Arctic: Newest Fighter Jets Sent on Joint Exercise in Greenland

Denmark: They Wanted To Change the Way We Shop Forever, but then Never Showed Up*

Denmark: An Angel of Death Stalks America

Denmark: Biden’s Landmark Climate Bill Creates Fear in the EU