Did You See Hakeem Jeffries' Latest Social Media Trainwreck?
The Investigation Into John Brennan Is Missing Two People, but One Key Individual
Scott Bessent Couldn't Stay Quiet Over This Atrocious Smear of the Trump Reconciliation...
Supreme Court Slaps Down a Federal Judge on Deportations, but There's Another Issue
He Went to Prison for Sharing Anti-Hillary Clinton Memes – Now He Has...
Brennan, Comey, and the Reckoning Long Overdue
Disturbing Glimpses of Democratic Anger
Does Harvard Have an Accreditation Problem on Its Hands?
Chicago Mayor Vows Local Police Will Never Cooperate With ICE
Former Democrat Governor of New York Offers Advice on How to Defeat Mamdani
Judge Accused of Aiding Illegal Immigrant Gets Some Bad News From Federal Magistrate...
The More Things Change
To Win the Tech Arms Race, America Can’t Ignore Microsoft’s Security Lapses and...
Is Weather the Next Weapon of Mass Destruction?
Illegal Aliens Detail the Conditions at Alligator Alcatraz
OPINION

Tea Party Makes a Statement

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Tea partiers won some and lost some last night, but their influence was strong enough to make a statement: the movement has made a difference.

Christine O’Donnell and Sharron Angle lost by healthy margins, but Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, and others won big. Voters from Pennsylvania to Wisconsin elected politicians with a distinctly conservative bent — one that was clearly influenced by the tea party.

Advertisement

“This is an organic movement. I don’t think that they can be characterized as anything other than having had a very dramatic effect,” said Rep. Steve King, (R-Iowa), who won his election handily last night and has emerged as a national tea party favorite.

In Pennsylvania, Pat Toomey eked out a lead that was hard-fought and late-breaking; returns showed him behind his competitor until midnight. He was widely characterized as being “too conservative” for Pennsylvania, which is generally a more moderate purple state. He tried to downplay that reputation as the campaign came to a close.

“It is important to note that tonight’s victory was not a partisan victory,” said Toomey, in his victory speech. “I could not have won with only Republican votes. It was because of Republicans and Democrats and Independents that we are celebrating here tonight… I will be a Senator for all Pennsylvanians.”

Marco Rubio has tempered his early primary message as well, and managed to earn widespread appeal among those who don’t even associate with the tea party. But it’s clear the tea party put him in office. His early appeal to conservative media and his impeccable grassroots outreach was made possible because of the movement, which came about at just the same time that Rubio hit the national scene.

Advertisement

Sean Duffy and Allen West were two House races that emphasized tea party support; Duffy solidified tea party support in Wisconsin’s 7th district after a fractious primary — the same can almost be said of Republican Senator-Elect Ron Johnson, at the top of the Wisconsin ticket. Allen West won because of grassroots support in Florida; his defeat of Democrat Ron Klein in Florida’s 22nd district was a push towards the right that will be an interesting fit for independent Sunshine State voters.

If Joe Miller and Ken Buck win their yet-undecided contests in Alaska and Colorado, the tea party’s emphasis will be even more pronounced.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement