With support from the University of Richmond

History News Network puts current events into historical perspective. Subscribe to our newsletter for new perspectives on the ways history continues to resonate in the present. Explore our archive of thousands of original op-eds and curated stories from around the web. Join us to learn more about the past, now.

Andrew Neil: The New Republicans

[Andrew Neil is a Scottish journalist and broadcaster. His Tea Party America is available on BBC iPlayer.]

‘I am not a witch.’ Now that’s not something you hear very often from a politician. But Christine O’Donnell, Tea Party darling and Republican candidate in Delaware for the US Senate, felt the need to say these words in a campaign commercial, after a youthful dalliance with witchcraft was revealed. The denial was somewhat undermined by the all-black outfit and smoky background. But the Democrats and their cheerleaders in the US media had a field day.

These Tea Party folks? Strange, barking, dangerous. Who’d vote for them? As predicted, though Ms O’Donnell had won a stunning victory against a GOP establishment candidate for the Republican nomination, she lost to the Democrats in Tuesday’s mid-term elections. Presumably the broomstick community felt jilted — and her opposition to masturbation was hardly a vote-winner.

But the Tea Party, a potent brew of libertarianism, limited government and social conservatism, has had the last laugh.

While the Democrats and the media concentrated on its more exotic candidates and wilder fringes, they failed to notice (at least until it was too late) that something potentially transformative was stirring in the American grassroots. They’ve noticed now...
Read entire article at Spectator (UK)