Inside The Group Therapy Session For Conservatives Who Hate Grover Norquist

SOURCE:  BusinessInsider.com, 2013-07-25
This page last modified: 2020-09-29 13:26:06 -0700 (PST)

  • Article by Josh Barro. Josh was a senior editor for Business Insider, where he wrote commentary on politics, business, and the economy. Before joining Business Insider, he was a founding correspondent at The Upshot, the economics and data section of The New York Times. Before that, he was Business Insider's politics editor. Before entering journalism, he worked in policy research for think tanks and as a real-estate banker at Wells Fargo. Josh is a contributor to MSNBC; host of KCRW's "Left, Right & Center"; and cohost with Linette Lopez of "Hard Pass." He holds a bachelor's degree in psychology from Harvard College.

  • See also:  Virginia "Ginni" Thomas


    David Corn has a story for Mother Jones today [2013-07-25] exposing "Groundswell," a group of conservative activists and journalists who meet weekly to coordinate messages and strategy.

    Groundswell seems to consist of a very specific subset of disgruntled conservatives: Losers who feel burned by Grover Norquist  [Americans for Tax Reform].

    Groundswell trains its fire both on the left and on a Republican establishment they see as too accommodating of the left. But while lots of conservatives, some of them quite powerful, hate John Boehner and think the GOP establishment is full of squishes, Groundswell doesn't reflect this whole group, at least based on the attendees Corn names.

    Let's look at the broad landscape of the Civil War within Republican Washington right now. On one side you have Republican congressional leadership and establishment groups like the American Action Forum and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, who want to pursue a somewhat pragmatic agenda on issues like the budget and the debt ceiling. These forces also favor immigration reform.

    On the other side, you have Tea Party-aligned groups like the Heritage FoundationAmericans for ProsperityFreedomWorks, and the Club for Growth who want the party to move farther right.

    David Corn's story gives no indication that anybody from the four latter groups is participating in Groundswell. And none of the named activists are primarily engaged on the tax and spending issues that are central to GOP infighting.

    The activists named in the article mostly work on niche issues that give them particular reason to have beef with Grover Norquist, a veteran anti-tax activist who leads the group Americans for Tax Reform (ATR).

    Every Wednesday morning, Norquist hosts an off-the-record coordinating meeting at ATR's offices, often with over 100 participants, including representatives from Republican congressional leadership and, when the President is a Republican, the White House. As David Corn notes in his article, Grover Norquist's meeting is open to a broad ideological cross-section of the conservative movement.

    [Disclosure (article author Josh Barro): "In 2003, I was a summer intern at ATR. I also attended the ATR meeting several times in my capacity as a policy researcher, I believe most recently in 2010."]

    Groundswell meets at exactly the same time, meaning its meeting has to consist of people who feel no need to attend Norquist's meeting, or aren't allowed to. And that's probably why David Corn's article doesn't name any conservative activists who come from groups like Americans for Prosperity or the Heritage Foundation, or who work mostly on economic issues. Whatever their disputes with Norquist or the GOP establishment more broadly, they need to work together on economic policy and need to come to his meeting to talk about it.

    So who is in Groundswell? The participants seem to fall into four categories. In three cases, there's an obvious reason why they'd write Grover Norquist off even when economic arch-conservatives aren't inclined to.

    Some people have been comparing Groundswell to Journolist, the listserve [electronic mailing list] of mostly left-wing journalists that caused embarrassment for its members, particularly Dave Weigel, when its archives were released in 2010.

    But Groundswell isn't Journolist. Its participants are much less important. The effort to keep John Boehner in line and push Republicans to never compromise is very real, but based on its known membership, Groundswell is not a key part of its apparatus.


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