Tea Party Tantrum
by digby
I love this story about the new Tea Party Senator from Wisconsin deciding that he doesn’t want to have anything do all that icky legislating and so he’s firing his staff in order to concentrate on “messaging.”
Running as a novice in 2010, [Ron]Johnson frequently struggled to offer any depth on any subject, declaring shortly before the election, “I don’t believe this election really is about details.” In one especially jarring example, Johnson chatted with the Green Bay Press Gazette’s editorial board, which pressed the Republican on economic policy. Johnson talked about “cutting spending,” and “getting the economy moving,” but simply couldn’t any questions with any substance at all. It was painful to watch.
Two years later, Roll Call reports that Johnson is poised to “purge nearly his entire Washington, D.C.-based legislative team,” in large part because they expect the senator to work on legislation — and he doesn’t want to.
He’s an interesting case study of someone who has talked more than he has listened, lectured more than he has developed relationships with his colleagues, and now he’s having a tough time because of that behavior in advancing his policy goals,” one senior GOP aide said. “It’s kind of like watching a temper tantrum by a 2-year-old in the middle of the grocery store.” […]
Sources indicated that when Johnson came to Washington, he put a staff together like “any other Senator” but quickly realized that the day-to-day grind of legislating was not his forte. Johnson said last week that he wanted more of his office’s focus to be on building an effective messaging operation.
Maybe he should have been a radio talk show host instead of a Senator. That’s where the real influence lies.