
Haberdashers in D.C. are stocking up on bowties and there's not a Ronald Reagan biography to be found in an airport bookstore anywhere. It can only mean one thing -- CPAC is just around the corner. From every corner of the country, young conservatives are pouring in to the District for the 37th annual Conservative Political Action Conference, which kicks off tomorrow morning in D.C.'s posh Woodley Park neighborhood.
This year's conference promises to be one of the most boisterous. Fired up on polls showing the Democratic party losing its grip on Congress and conservatives surging across the country, the CPAC of this year will not be the collective self-examination of what's wrong with the GOP that last year's was. This time around, attendees won't be looking back. A year after Democrats took power in Washington, the agenda for this year's CPAC shows a conservative movement ready for its comeback.
As Christina reported this morning, many of the plenary sessions this year embrace the Tea Party movement, offering the conservative grassroots movement space on the stage with some of the establishment GOP's brightest lights.
The embrace of the movement goes beyond the sessions, however. The keynote speaker this year is Glenn Beck, as close to a national spokesperson as the Tea Party has. Last year, Rush Limbaugh gave the final keynote, a speech focused on urging conservatives to hold the line on their values in the face of the Hope and Change carried into the political narrative by President Obama's 2008 campaign.
Beck has also urged conservatives to stay true to their values. But he's been much more willing to tell his followers to walk away from the Republican establishment if it won't toe the conservative line than Limbaugh has. Where last year's convention used Limbaugh to focus on the establishment GOP's key strengths, the speech by Beck shifts the focus to the power of conservatism to exact change on all political levels, including the GOP.
The man who exemplifies that change, Marco Rubio, will also be on hand at this year's CPAC. Rubio, who's seems more and more likely to knock off Gov. Charlie Crist in the Florida GOP Senate primary, will give one of the first speeches of the event on Thursday morning. Crist was on last year's CPAC presidential straw poll ballot (he earned less than 1% of the vote), but this year his name is nowhere to be seen. Rubio, however, is a star of the modern conservative movement -- he'll be introduced by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), a scion of the right and the man who's early endorsement helped push Rubio into national prominence.
Other speakers from at this year's event also represent the conservative pushback against the mainstream GOP. Confirmed speakers include Dick Armey, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Liz Cheney and Ron Paul. But there are plenty of speakers from the mainstream scheduled to speak as well, including former Bush administration Attorney General John Ashcroft, Newt Gingrich and George Will.
Many of the 2012 GOP presidential field will be on hand as well, with the notable exception of Sarah Palin, who declined an invitation to speak at the event for the second year in a row. Mitt Romney, Tim Pawlenty, Mike Pence, Rick Santorum and Gingrich will be there, though, giving political prognosticators something to write about other than Rubio.
Outside the hotel, the social scene will be 100% conservative as well. Politico published this list of CPAC parties, which include "Bowling With Mitt" and "Late Night With T-Paw." The biggest event on the social calendar isn't focused on a current GOP politician however. Politico reports that the "the climax of the week" will be "the sixth annual 'Reaganpalooza,'" where attendees pack a Capitol Hill bar and "drink one for the Gipper."
If that's not entertaining enough, there are outlets for physical violence among the parties as well. Female guests at the CivicForumPAC party Friday night will get the chance to break open a pinata modeled after Nancy Pelosi, The Hill reports. Male guests at the party will be invited to take their best shot at the Harry Reid punching bag.
Iggy Pop
February 17, 2010 11:37 AM
A friend of mine pointed out to me recently that one can argue that the Tea Party movement has the potential to seriously skew political discourse in the U.S. for a long-time. He used the example of how the New Left influenced politics in the 60s and 70s. The significance of this argument is that once more, we have another reason why not to dismiss Tea Baggers, even though it is easy to parody them.
I think it is fair to say that the New Left did not seriously leave an explicit mark on conventional politics in Washington. After all, no matter how much I would have liked, Abbie Hoffman was never elected to any major political office. The same is true of all other significant leaders of the New Left, SDS, and the many other Leftist groups that arose in the 60s and 70s (from mild to radical). I don’t think any of them ever was elected to a national position. If one or two were elected, I apologize to them for still concluding that they left little of an overt conventional presence in Washington. Now yes, I do know that few New Leftists ever ran for such office, but the point is, they never held major political positions. Having said all of this however, I also think it is fair to say that these groups did influence political discourse in the U.S. in a significant manner. I’d say they had a role in ending Vietnam. I’d give them credit for making Nixon expand Great Society programs. I can go on, but I won’t.
Tea Baggers are today’s New Left. Yes, Sarah Palin (it really pains me to impy she is Abbie’s equal) will never get elected to national office. I doubt any Tea Bagger will. But they are moving political discussions to the extreme Right. For example, I see Obama has once more brought up his idiotic idea in my opinion of a commission to trim the deficit. History is repeating itself.
The message here folks is don’t dismiss these lunatics. To do so is cavalier and foolish. The Left must mobilize itself for resistance.
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DocSportello
February 17, 2010 2:17 PM in reply to Iggy Pop
Excellent post.
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cambridgeMR
February 18, 2010 6:22 AM in reply to DocSportello
Maybe the OP could have used the delete button? You know, for shortening to the point?
-- Flaco the Bad
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sean
February 17, 2010 2:26 PM in reply to Iggy Pop
few New Leftists ever ran for such office, but the point is, they never held major political positions
John Kerry, Tom Hayden mebbe, to name two...
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tmbo
February 18, 2010 10:57 AM in reply to Iggy Pop
IPop, your point is well taken and you sight some important accomplishments. But it is often said by far right conservatives, such as Pat Buchanan, that the New Left was the greatest gift they could have received. Remember that Nixon mobilized the nation around the "silent majority" that brought us years of conservatism and neo-conservatism. I wonder whether this fringe group of right wing extremists is not doing the same favor for those of us at the center or left. Not to say these crazies should be ignored, since no one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people.
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ohyeathatsright
February 17, 2010 12:38 PM
[blockquote]"the climax of the week" will be "the sixth annual 'Reaganpalooza,'" where attendees pack a Capitol Hill bar and "drink one for the Gipper."[/blockquote]
Man am I glad that my climaxes during the week are much more entertaining.
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sean
February 17, 2010 2:10 PM
Hopefully a male prostitute of 'Joe the Plumber stature' will speak...
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FlownOver
February 17, 2010 2:37 PM
I'm pretty sure, your headline notwithstanding, that The Who will not be in attendance. Everyone else you list continues to display a complete willingness to get fooled again.
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parisblues
February 17, 2010 6:14 PM
Can't you just IMAGINE the wailing and gnashing of teeth if any gathering of liberals were to feature pinatas and punching bags of Mitch McConnell and John Boehner?
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jeffgee
February 18, 2010 9:39 AM
I doubt CPAC will have a pinata of Dennis Hastert for the attendees to whack, but today's Chicago Tribune had a page 1 above the fold story about how ex-Speaker Hastert still gets about $1 million per year from the government to run his "office". He rents it from some friends, so that keeps it cozy for conservatives. It's a museum of his memorabilia. All his office expenses are paid for by the taxpayers, as was his travel to from Illinois D.C. to unveil his portrait. He insists on flying first class. He's not some retired pensioner. He bought land near the cloverleaf of an expressway he was pushing for building. He's a lobbyist and gets paid well for public speaking at events, so he's not a charity case or a congressman who took a vow of poverty.
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