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'No fools on our ticket'

As primary season nears, the simmering tensions between Corporate America and Tea Party Republicans are boiling over. Democrats are already popping the popcorn.
The bronze 'Charging Bull' sculpture that symbolizes Wall Street is photographed Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2006, in the financial district of New York.
The bronze 'Charging Bull' sculpture that symbolizes Wall Street is photographed Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2006, in the financial district of New York. (AP Photo...
Just over the last few months, we've seen reports from the New York Times, Bloomberg News, and the Washington Post on the simmering tensions between Corporate America and Tea Party Republicans, driving a wedge into the GOP coalition. With party primaries looming, talk of a "Republican civil war" abounds.
 
Some of the party's major players are even putting their money where their mouths are. This Wall Street Journal piece yesterday was circulated far and wide in Republican circles.

Republican leaders and their corporate allies have launched an array of efforts aimed at diminishing the clout of the party's most conservative activists and promoting legislation instead of confrontation next year. [...] The U.S. Chamber of Commerce early next year plans to roll out an aggressive effort -- expected to cost at least $50 million -- to support establishment, business-friendly candidates in primaries and the general election, with an aim of trying to win a Republican Senate majority. "Our No. 1 focus is to make sure, when it comes to the Senate, that we have no loser candidates," said the business group's top political strategist, Scott Reed. "That will be our mantra: No fools on our ticket."

Though Reed did not specify who would qualify as a "fool," it's not hard to look back at major Senate races from the last couple of cycles and know exactly the kind of candidates he's referencing (O'Donnell, Akin, Mourdock, Angle, et al). In other words, when Reed and the Republican Party's Chamber of Commerce wing talk about "loser candidates" and "fools," they're obviously talking about right-wing Tea Party favorites.
 
Also note, there's been ample analysis this year noting that Corporate America may want to overcome extremist candidates in GOP primaries, but if this wing of the party doesn't commit real resources, Tea Partiers will prevail. It's worth acknowledging, then, that $50 million in support of establishment candidates is a considerable sum.
 
But as word of the Chamber's intentions spread, the backlash soon followed. "Special interests in Washington will do whatever it takes to protect big government Republicans," Senate Conservatives Fund Executive Director Matt Hoskins told TPM yesterday. "Their ability to get future bailouts, kickbacks, and other favors depends on it."
 
Club for Growth senior fellow Tom Borrelli added, "This is a battle between the outsiders and insiders and insiders include big bucks and establishment Republicans."
 
Remember, primary season hasn't really begun in earnest, which means these disputes are likely to intensify very soon. For many Democrats, hoping to see Republicans at each other's throats during an election year, the popcorn is already being popped.