Political gain


Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa

Is the tea party getting its groove back? Shouts of vindication from around the country suggest the movement’s leaders certainly think so.

They say the IRS acknowledgement that it had targeted their groups for extra scrutiny — a claim that tea-party activists had made for years — is helping pump new energy into the coalition. And they are trying to use that development, along with the ongoing controversy over the Benghazi, Libya, terrorist attacks and the Justice Department’s secret seizure of journalists’ phone records, to recruit new activists incensed about government overreach.

“This is the defining moment to say, ‘I told you so,’” said Katrina Pierson, a Dallas-based tea-party leader who traveled to Washington last week as the three political headaches for President Barack Obama unfolded.

Luke Rogonjich, a tea-party leader in Phoenix, called the trio of controversies a powerful confluence that bolsters the GOP’s case against big government. “Suddenly, there are a lot of things pressing on the dam,” said Rogonjich.

It’s unclear whether a movement made up of disparate grass-roots groups with no central body can take advantage of the moment and leverage it to grow stronger after a sub-par showing in last fall’s election had called into question the movement’s lasting impact. Republicans and Democrats alike say the tea party runs the risk of going too far in its criticism, which could once again open the door to Democratic efforts to paint it as an extreme arm of the GOP.

“Never underestimate the tea party’s ability to overplay its hand,” said Democratic strategist Mo Elleithee. “Just because there is universal agreement that the IRS went too far, that should not be misread as acceptance of the tea party’s ideology of anger.”

At the very least, furor over the IRS devoting special attention to tea-party groups claiming tax-exempt status is giving the tea party more visibility than it has had in months, and it’s providing a new rallying cry for tea- party organizers starting to plot how to influence the 2014 congressional elections. The law allows tax-exempt organizations to lobby and dabble in politics as long as their primary purpose is social welfare.

The tax-agency scandal — it has led to the acting IRS commissioner’s ouster, a criminal investigation and Capitol Hill hearings — seems to validate the tea party’s long-held belief among supporters that government was trampling on them specifically, a claim dismissed by ousted commissioner Steven T. Miller. He has called the targeting “a mistake and not an act of partisanship.”

Nevertheless, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., elected in 2010 with tea-party backing, said the IRS scandal “confirms many of the feelings that led to the tea-party movement in the first place.”

“What’s happened here is a reminder of, this is what happens when you expand government,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press. “That and the disaster that is Obamacare is going to be a real catalyst in 2014 and beyond.”

Tea-party activists hope they also can drive support ahead of the elections by stoking widespread suspicions that the Obama administration and State Department are hiding key details about the September 2012 attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. The seizure of Associated Press phone records also plays into their argument that government is too intrusive.