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The Modern Tea Party Movement and Anti-Federalism The Modern Tea Party Movement and Anti-Federalism
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Barack Obama, Federalist Barack Obama, Federalist
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The Constitution’s Federalist Bias I: Limits to the Tea Party’s and Neo-Anti-Federalist Fortunes The Constitution’s Federalist Bias I: Limits to the Tea Party’s and Neo-Anti-Federalist Fortunes
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The Constitution’s Federalist Bias II: The Presidential Pattern The Constitution’s Federalist Bias II: The Presidential Pattern
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The Maturation of the Lovers’ Quarrel: A Formidable State & a Plebiscitary Democracy The Maturation of the Lovers’ Quarrel: A Formidable State & a Plebiscitary Democracy
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Conclusion Conclusion
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8 Epilogue: The Tea Party, Obama, & Beyond
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Published:August 2014
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Abstract
This chapter explores the battle between modern Democrats and President Barack Obama, and the Republican Party and in particular the Tea Party movement. The Patient Protection and Affordable Healthcare Act of 2010, dubbed “Obamacare,” which was challenged by twenty-six states as an unconstitutional grab of authority, represented a serious dent on the wave of Anti-Federalism that swept Washington with the Reagan Revolution. It concludes with some thoughts about the built-in Federalist bias of the Constitution, and the twin legacies of over two centuries of quarreling: the paradox of a formidable national administrative state and a vibrant, cacophonous democracy.
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