The Tea Party wing of the Republican Party had the perfect strategy for upstate New York's 23rd congressional district:
1. Support a candidate who doesn't live in the district — in this case, Conservative Douglas Hoffman. Savage the local Republican choice, Dede Scozzafava, and hound her into dropping out.
2. Condemn the local Republicans who had picked the moderate Scozzafava as being "insiders." And have the finger-pointers be Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson. (Guess no one would ever accuse them of being insiders in upstate New York.)
3. Refer to the issues that concern voters in the "North Country" district — dredging the St. Lawrence River, building a new highway — as "parochial." Have that term be flung by former Texas Rep. Dick Armey, now a right-wing gadfly — and in response to distress shown by the Watertown Daily Times editorial board that Hoffman knew nothing of local matters.
4. Bring Armey into the editorial board meeting.
5. Have Palin make flashy sweeps through upstate New York, spreading voter repellant around this politically moderate district.
Put it all together, and you have the perfect strategy for turning a congressional seat that had been in Republican hands for well over a century into a Democratic seat. As recently as last month, polls showed Scozzafava trouncing both the Democrat Bill Owens and Conservative Hoffman in the polls. Not an easy race for Republicans to lose, but the Tea Party nihilists showed how.
A lesson here for Republicans, and Democrats as well, is that Americans don't live on cable television or talk radio. These media invented the Tea Party movement and egg on its followers, who are angry for reasons not necessarily related to politics.
This crowd, after all, is pretty darn colorful and makes for good entertainment.
Americans live in real places, and their candidates tend to be familiar figures they have coffee with. Scozzafava had served as a mayor and state assemblywoman. She was not some cartoon character on which the opposition could safely launch its childish attacks.
No electorate approves of carpetbaggers. If any word describes what Tea-Baggers tried to pull in upstate New York, it was an outsiders' takeover of a local race.
Hoffman clearly spent more time visiting with Glenn Beck than reading the local papers. And his Tea-Baggers were also moneybaggers. On Election Day, when Hoffman seemed to have a slight edge, the Club for Growth proudly announced out of Washington that it had dumped over $1 million into his campaign coffers.
"Hoffman's cash didn't come from somebody in Hermon or Hopkinton or Adams Center or from anywhere that cares about the country," wrote Jeffrey Savitskie, a Watertown Daily Times editor who had planned to vote for Scozzafava, but then moved to Owens. "It came from folks who know so little about the North Country that they would likely believe it if you told them Alexandria Bay was an exotic dancer."
Independents should welcome the outcome in upstate New York, not because a Democrat won, but because the American two-party system needs to offer them a real choice. It can't please them that New York state will now have only two Republicans in its 29-member congressional delegation, or that New England has none.
The Republican Party has been torn by a civil war between its establishment and insurgents on the right. The battle of New York's 23rd could be the Gettysburg that determines the winner. The right-wingers lost badly in what was a reliably Republican district.
But questions remain whether the Tea-Baggers will retreat — and more unsettling for mainstream Republicans, who the Tea-Baggers thought they were fighting.
To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2009 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

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17 Comments | Post Comment
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Amazing that Newt Gingrich is suddenly this prophetic, mature, down-to-earth guy in your eyes, Harrop. Remember the 1994 Republican Revolution that he led in Congress? Back then he was an "extremist," a cold-hearted thug trying to take food from the mouths of hungry schoolchildren (as Dick Gephardt intoned.). Remember "How the Gingrich stole Christmas?" Now you're sitting here telling us that RINO pro-abortion, pro-card-check, Democrat-lite DeDe ScoffLaw is what Republican voters really wanted. I also noticed you aren't particularly interested in the fact that the Democrat Party got their heads handed to them in Virginia and New Jersey last night, or that gay marriage lost its 31st popular vote, or the utter embarrassment and setback this represents for the Obama Administration - much less how it's going to be a harbinger of utter and total defeat of the Democrat Party at the polls next year. No, instead you crow about a single congressional race electing a moderate Democrat for a ONE YEAR term by a three point margin in a three-way-race. Hang it up.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Matt
Thu Nov 5, 2009 2:56 AM
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The Republican mistake in New York 23rd was in allowing a few party hacks to sit around a pizza parlor and decide that an ultra liberal left-wing candidate should represent the party. The Pendergast/Daley methods have long been discarded. Primaries allow for the will of citizens to select candidates.
By the way, I hope you noticed that the Tea Bagger Carpetbaggers that came to Virginia and New Jersey stayed and voted. Don't you think that is what happenwed?
See ya in 2010.
Comment: #2
Posted by: HILARY WATSON
Thu Nov 5, 2009 1:03 PM
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I am disgusted that a "mainstream" columnist of whatever side of the political spectrum would use a vulgar term such as "teabaggers" to refer to political opponents. Look up the phrase in the urban dictionary online, if you haven't heard what it means by now. Then apologize to your readers.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Susan G.
Thu Nov 5, 2009 8:32 PM
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1. so, democrats have never heavily supported candidates in faraway districts in this fashion??
2. Dede Scozzafava was as liberal as a lib dem
3. As for the claim that Fox is "molding" opinion and the teabaggers are astro turf, not real grass roots -- there's no way fox etc. would be so popular if they aren't resonating, touching a chord, giving voice to many people's feelings!
Comment: #4
Posted by: bo jones
Fri Nov 6, 2009 4:28 AM
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1. so, democrats have never heavily supported candidates in faraway districts in this fashion??
2. Dede Scozzafava was as liberal as a lib dem
3. As for the claim that Fox is "molding" opinion and the teabaggers are astro turf, not real grass roots -- there's no way fox etc. would be so popular if they aren't resonating, touching a chord, giving voice to many people's feelings!
Comment: #5
Posted by: bo jones
Fri Nov 6, 2009 4:30 AM
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One more thing to add to my previous points (1 - 3): Froma, you list all the local issues that a U.S.rep. deals with for his district. True. However, you conveniently neglect to tell the WHOLE story -- which is that additionally, every U.S. Rep has the power (when being part of a voting majority) to affect the entire country's laws; therefore it's not so surprising that people from as far away as, for example, Alaska, know they have a stake in every and any race for U.S. representatives. Come on, Froma, fess up -- you were quite slanted in this piece for the purpose of a "somewhat" sensational article. People can detect youy bias!
Comment: #6
Posted by: bo jones
Fri Nov 6, 2009 5:29 AM
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Perhaps you should re-write your article, based on the Dems' loss of two very key gubernatorial races last Tuesday night, and simply call it "How to Lose". It's amusing to me that you have glommed onto a race where the guy who almost won came in at the last minute with vocal support only, no personal appearances, from Sarah Palin and Tim Pawlenty, and who somehow managed to get Scozzafava to drop out of the race! What the heck is that all about??? If she was thrashing her opponents in the polls, wonder why she felt the need to step aside completely. Too bad she didn't do that earlier, in which case Hoffman would have beaten Owens. As it was, the right-wingers really didn't "lose badly." Owens was one lucky Democrat that night.
As I recall, the sitting PRESIDENT, campaigned often and hard for John Corzine (and he's a mean ol' man from Wall Street who made a fortune with Goldman Sachs...how does Obama justify that friendship???), yet his man lost BIG. This same PRESIDENT also campaigned for Creigh Deeds, who proceeded to lose BIG. Yet you, and many of your friends who take up column inches in the paper, have overlooked those races ("they weren't that important") in order to zero in on a tiny district in upstate New York, or is it in Canada??? I suppose being honest about the fact that it truly was not a good night for Obama and the Democrats, while they did pick up a seat in the 23rd, would have taken far too much pride and objectivity to report.
And, come on, Froma, you can't possibly mean that the cable channels made up the Tea Parties and their followers??? The people I've heard know exactly why they are angry, and what they don't want from this administration. I suppose those of us who object to your opinion should however follow your logic and tell the world that MSNBC created ACORN and all the other fringe groups that have come out of the woodwork since the election last Fall. Actually, now that I think about it, that could be true. They certainly deserve each other.
And I assure you the Republican Party has not been torn by a civil war. Are they trying to challenge themselves to present the best possible articulation of their principles? Absolutely. And they will come out stronger as a result. It reminds of the internecine fighting going on among the Democrats -- those like Pelosi who never met a leftist cause she didn't like, and those who actually understand that most Americans (not those living in the shadows of Nob Hill) really are moderates and don't care to turn over their lives to the government just yet.
The Tea Baggers (Why do you guys use this in a pejorative sense? Didn't these kinds of freedom-loving individuals set our own Revolution into motion???) know exactly whom they are fighting. It's people such as you. In closing, let me just say that Americans love to win, and we do keep score. Last Tuesday night in the three significant contests? Republicans - 2, Democrats -1. We win, you lose, game over. Expect more of the same in 2010.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Laura Stillman
Fri Nov 6, 2009 2:07 PM
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Do the math Froma the man HOFFMAN GOT 45 % Of THE VOTE.with no money in his kick , your man got less then 50% of the vote who need help from a turn coat RINO There was a lot of hanky panky going on in them Absent tee ballots that might have been the vote that put the demon crate over the top. But wait till next time Oh by the way If I could recall Hilary your girlfriend and your boyfreids the Kennedys were also Carpetbaggers to HUH". Well I have to go now I have to write a check to the Hoffman campaign for his election coming up in 2010 in the 28Th dist. You are wrong we are write end of story .
Matt Deleo
Comment: #8
Posted by: matt deleo
Sat Nov 7, 2009 5:45 AM
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Re: Susan G. RIGHT ON SUSAN!! one more year and its all over for them LIBS >>>>>>Matt DeLeo North carolina. mattdeleo7@aol.com
Comment: #9
Posted by: matt deleo
Sat Nov 7, 2009 5:50 AM
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Re: Susan G.
Susan, I looked it up on google - you are right. HOWEVER, most people, including me, have never heard of that!! (Or am I just too "sheltered"?)
Last year,(spring) conservatives were getting together to to have tea parties, fashioned after the Boston one in 1700s to protest taxes. They were even sending in teabags to congressmen.. Therefore, they got the name "teabaggers" -- nothing to do with the slang term. Don't fuss about it.
Comment: #10
Posted by: bo jones
Sat Nov 7, 2009 6:53 AM
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Ms. Harrop either knew the meaning of teabagger and wanted to insult a large portion of readers or didn't know and is not a serious writer, but a hack. The true fault lies with Creators Syndicate. Shame on all of you. Apologies are due.
Comment: #11
Posted by: toni william
Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:23 AM
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Ms. Harrop either knew the meaning of teabagger and wanted to insult a large portion of readers or didn't know and is not a serious writer, but a hack. The true fault lies with Creators Syndicate. Shame on all of you. Apologies are due.
Comment: #12
Posted by: toni william
Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:24 AM
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I agree with Susan G. above. It is really surprising that vulgarity and name-calling is so commonplace in your articles. It is as if civility is the bitter pill. But this is "bridge-burning" at its best! Vilify your opponents , then when they get offended with the vitriol nature, complain about how they don't want to talk to you.
Comment: #13
Posted by: MarkV
Sat Nov 7, 2009 7:58 AM
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"No electorate approves of carpetbaggers" What did you call Hilllary Clinton as she ran for New York State Senator?
Comment: #14
Posted by: G
Sun Nov 8, 2009 12:22 AM
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Re: bo jones
If "tea-baggers" is such an innocent noun, then why did Anderson Cooper apologize for using it?
If you think that the media on the left used this term in the literal sense, you are extremely
naive. Cooper, et al, were using the word with a smirk, attempting to appeal to their hip and
"sophisticated" New York coterie.
Comment: #15
Posted by: Julian Baker
Sun Nov 8, 2009 6:03 PM
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Ms. Harrop - YOU ARE AN IDIOT!! This article is not worth commenting about because it is complete drivel. I cannot believe people actually pay you to write such garbage. But, you have a right to say it because this is still the America I know and love. I hope it stays that way because it sure seems more socialistic everyday while Mr. Inexperience and his pals, or czars, are in office.
Comment: #16
Posted by: Kelly Uhrmacher
Mon Nov 9, 2009 11:35 AM
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Re: Susan G. - good for you!
Comment: #17
Posted by: Kelly Uhrmacher
Mon Nov 9, 2009 11:36 AM
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