Tea Party movement
Tea Party
protesters fill the West Lawn of the U.S.
Capitol and the National Mall on September 12, 2009.
The Tea
Party movement (TPM) is an American populist
political movement that is generally recognized as conservative and libertarian
and has sponsored protests and supported political candidates
since 2009. It endorses reduced government spending,opposition
to taxation in varying degrees,reduction of the national
debt and federal budget deficit, and adherence to an originalist
interpretation of the United States Constitution.
The name
"Tea Party" is a reference to the Boston
Tea Party, a protest by colonists who objected to a British tax on tea in
1773 and demonstrated by dumping British tea taken from docked ships into the
harbor. Some commentators have referred
to the Tea in "Tea Party" as the backronym
"Taxed Enough Already".
The Tea Party
movement has caucuses
in the House of Representatives and
the Senate of the United States. The Tea Party movement has no central
leadership but is composed of a loose affiliation of national and local groups
that determine their own platforms and agendas. The Tea Party movement has been
cited as an example of grassroots political activity, although it has also been
cited as an example of astroturfing.
The Tea Party's
most noted national figures include Republican politicians such as Sarah Palin, Dick Armey, Michele
Bachman and Ron Paul,
with Paul described as the "intellectual grandfather" of the
movement. As of 2011, the Tea Party
movement is not a national political party, but has endorsed Republican
candidates. Polls show that most Tea
Partiers consider themselves to be Republicans. Commentators, including Gallup
editor-in-chief Frank Newport, have suggested that the movement is not a new
political group but simply a rebranding of traditional Republican candidates
and policies. An October 2010 Washington
Post canvass of local Tea Party organizers found 87% saying
"dissatisfaction with mainstream Republican Party leaders" was
"an important factor in the support the group has received so far".
Background and history
See also: Tax revolt,
List of Tea Party protests, 2009, and
List of Tea Party protests, 2010
The theme of
the Boston Tea Party, an iconic event in American
history, has long been used by anti-tax protesters. It was part of Tax Day
protests held throughout the 1990s and earlier. More recently, the anniversary
of the original Boston Tea Party was commemorated by Republican Congressman Ron Paul supporters who held a
fund raising event for the 2008 presidential primaries advocating an end to fiat money
and the Federal Reserve System, disengaging from
foreign entanglements in Iraq and Afghanistan, and upholding States'
rights. Fox News commentator Juan
Williams says that the TPM emerged largely as a result of Paul's 2008
primary campaign, although on-air comments delivered on CNBC by Rick Santelli
are credited with inspiring a number of Tea Party-themed websites and events.
A Tea Party
protester holds a sign saying "Remember: Dissent is Patriotic" at a Nashville Tea Party on February 27, 2009.
Early local protest events
On January 24,
2009, Trevor Leach, chairman of the Young Americans for Liberty in New York
State organized a "Tea Party" protest in response to "obesity
taxes" proposed by New York Governor David
Paterson, and out-of-control spending. Several of the protesters wore
Native American headdresses similar to the band of 18th century colonists who
dumped tea in Boston Harbor to express outrage about British taxes.
Some of the
protests were partially in response to several Federal laws: the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008, the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009, and a series of healthcare reform
bills.
New
York Times journalist Kate Zernike reported that leaders within the Tea Party credit Seattle blogger and
conservative activist Keli Carender with organizing the first Tea Party in
February 2009, although the term "Tea Party" was not used.[41]
Other articles, written by Chris Good of The
Atlantic[42]
and NPR's Martin
Kaste,
credit Carender as "one of the first" Tea Party organizers and state
that she "organized some of the earliest Tea Party-style protests".
[ Keli Carender (born c. 1981)
is a Seattle, Washington-based blogger credited with
being the first Tea Party protest activist when she was the
principal organizer of a protest of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 on February 16, 2009. Carender started her blog Redistributing
Knowledge on January 25, 2009, writing under the nom de plume
Liberty Belle redistributingknowledge@gmail.com
or watch at http://www.redistributingknowledge.blogspot.com ]
Carender first
organized what she called a "Porkulus Protest" in Seattle on Presidents Day, February 16, the day
before President Barack Obama signed the stimulus bill into
law.[44]
Carender said she did it without support from outside groups or city officials.
"I just got fed up and planned it." Carender said 120 people
participated. "Which is amazing for the bluest of blue cities I live in, and on
only four days notice! This was due to me spending the entire four days calling
and emailing every person, think tank, policy center, university professors
(that were sympathetic), etc. in town, and not stopping until the day
came."
Carender also
contacted conservative author and Fox News
contributor Michelle Malkin, and asked her to publicize the
rally on her blog. Carender then held a
second protest on February 27, 2009, reporting "We more than doubled our
attendance at this one."
According to
pollster Scott Rasmussen, the bailouts of banks by the Bush and Obama administrations triggered the Tea
Party's rise. The interviewer adds that the movement's anger centers on two
issues, quoting Rasmussen as saying, "They think federal spending,
deficits and taxes are too high, and they think no one in Washington is
listening to them, and that latter point is really, really important."
First national protests
On February 19,
2009, in a broadcast from the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, CNBC Business News
editor Rick Santelli criticized the government plan to
refinance mortgages, which had just been announced the day before. He said
that those plans were "promoting bad behavior" by "subsidizing
losers' mortgages". He suggested holding a tea party for traders to gather
and dump the derivatives in the Chicago
River on July 1. A number of the
floor traders around him cheered on his proposal, to the amusement of the hosts
in the studio. Santelli's "rant" became a viral video
after being featured on the Drudge Report.
In response to
Santelli, websites such as ChicagoTeaParty.com (registered in August 2008 by
Chicago radio producer Zack Christenson) were live within 12 hours. About 10
hours after Santelli's remarks, reTeaParty.com was bought to coordinate Tea
Parties scheduled for Independence Day and, as of March
4, was reported to be receiving 11,000 visitors a day.
According to The
New Yorker writer Ben McGrath and New
York Times reporter Kate Zernike, this is where the movement was first
inspired to coalesce under the collective banner of "Tea Party". By
the next day, guests on Fox News had already begun to mention this new
"Tea Party".
As reported by The Huffington Post, a Facebook page
was developed on February 20 calling for Tea Party protests across the country.
Soon, the "Nationwide Chicago Tea Party" protest was coordinated
across over 40 different cities for February 27, 2009, thus establishing the
first national modern Tea Party protest. The movement has been supported
nationally by at least 12 prominent individuals and their associated
organizations.
Symbols
Second
Revolution flag
Beginning in
2009, the Gadsden flag has become a favorite among the Tea Party
movement nationwide, serving as an alternative to the stars and stripes for Tea Party
protesters who feel patriotism for their country and are upset at the
government. It was also seen being displayed by members of Congress at Tea Party
rallies. Some lawmakers have dubbed it a political symbol due to the Tea Party
connection, and the political nature of Tea Party supporters.
The Second
Revolution flag gained national attention on January 19, 2010. It is a version
of the Betsy Ross American flag, with a Roman Numeral II in the center of the
circle of 13 stars, symbolizing the second Revolution in America.
The Second Revolution flag has been called synonymous with Tea Party causes and
events.
Composition
See also: List of Tea Party politicians
Membership and demographics
Several polls
have been conducted on the demographics of the movement. Though the various
polls sometimes turn up slightly different results, they tend to show that Tea
Party supporters are a mix demographic, not specific to race, age or sex, they
are more conservative.
When surveying
supporters or participants of the Tea Party movement, polls have shown that
they are to a very great extent more likely to be registered Republican, have a
favorable opinion of the Republican Party and an unfavorable opinion of the
Democratic Party.
Canvass and polls, remembering that numbers
can be manipulated to say anything any one specific poll wants it to
reflect. Number lie, liars do
numbers. Polls not included in this
document, research for your views specific
Leadership and groups
Morris says the
Tea Party is a grassroots movement with no national leadership.
"Those who conduct its affairs are mere coordinators of local groups where
the real power lies. The entire affair is a grassroots-dominated
movement." He notes that the teapartypatriots.org umbrella group, with more
than 2,800 local affiliates, has only seven paid staff members, and a payroll
of $50,000 a month.
An October 2010
Washington Post canvass of 647 local Tea Party organizers asked
"which national figure best represents your groups?" and got the
following responses: no one
The success of
candidates popular within the Tea Party movement has boosted Sarah Palin's
visibility. Rasmussen and Schoen (2010) conclude that "She is the symbolic
leader of the movement, and more than anyone else has helped to shape it."
The movement
has been supported nationally by prominent individuals and organizations, including:
501(c)(4)
Non-Profit Organizations:
·
Tea Party Patriots, an organization with more
than 1,000 affiliated groups across the nation that proclaims itself to be the
"Official Home of the Tea Party Movement.
·
Americans For Prosperity, a grassroots
organization founded by David H. Koch in 2003, and led by Tim Phillips. The group has
over 1 million members in 500 local affiliates, and led protests against health
care reform in 2009.
·
FreedomWorks, an organization led Dick Armey.
Like Americans For Prosperity, the group has over 1 million members in 500
local affiliates. It makes local and national candidate endorsements.
·
Tea Party Express, a national bus tour run by Our Country Deserves Better PAC,
itself a conservative political action committee created by Sacramento-based
Republican consulting firm Russo, Marsh, and Associates.
For-Profit
Businesses:
·
Tea Party Nation, which sponsored the National Tea Party Convention that
was criticized for its $549 ticket price and because Sarah Palin
was apparently paid $100,000 USD for her appearance (which she put towards SarahPAC
Informal
Organizations and Coalitions:
·
The National Tea Party Federation, formed
on April 8, 2010, by several leaders in the Tea Party movement to help spread
its message and to respond to critics with a quick, unified response.
·
The
Nationwide Tea Party Coalition, a loose national coalition of several dozen
local tea party groups.
Prominent
Individuals:
·
In July 2010, Representative Michele
Bachmann, a Minnesota Republican, formed the House congressional Tea
Party Caucus. This congressional caucus, which Bachmann chairs,
will be devoted to the Tea Party's stated principles of "fiscal
responsibility, adherence to the Constitution, and limited government". As of August 2, 2010, the caucus consisted of
49 Republican representatives. Jason
Chaffetz and Melissa Clouthier accuse them of trying to hijack or co-opt
the grassroots Tea Party Movement.
Agenda
Contract from America
Main article: Contract from America
The Contract
from America was the idea of Houston-based lawyer Ryan Hecker. He stated that
he developed the concept of creating a grassroots
call for reform prior to the April 15, 2009, Tax Day Tea Party rallies. To get
his idea off the ground, he launched a website, ContractFromAmerica.com, which
encouraged people to offer possible planks
for the contract.
The Tea Party Patriots have asked both Democrats and
Republicans to sign on to the Contract. No Democrats signed on, and the
contract met resistance from some Republicans who since created
"Commitment to America". Candidates in the 2010 elections who signed
the Contract from America included Utah's Mike Lee, Nevada's Sharron
Angle, Sen. Coburn (R-OK), and Sen. DeMint
(R-SC).
Foreign policy
In an August
2010 article for Foreign Policy magazine, Ron Paul outlined
foreign policy views the Tea Party movement should emphasize: "I see
tremendous opportunities for movements like the Tea Party to prosper by
capitalizing on the Democrats' broken promises to overturn the George W. Bush
administration's civil liberties abuses and end the disastrous wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. A return to the traditional U.S. foreign policy of active private
engagement but government noninterventionism is the only alternative that can
restore our moral and fiscal health."
Walter Russell Mead analyzes the foreign policy
views of the Tea Party movement in a 2011 essay published in Foreign
Affairs. Mead says that Jacksonian populists, such as the Tea Party,
combine a belief in American exceptionalism and its role in
the world with skepticism of American's "ability to create a liberal world
order". When necessary, they favor total war and unconditional surrender
over "limited wars for limited goals". Mead identifies two main
trends, one somewhat personified by Ron Paul and the other by Sarah Palin.
"Paulites" have a Jeffersonian, "neo-isolationist"
approach that seeks to avoid foreign military involvement.
"Palinites", while seeking to avoid being drawn into unnecessary
conflicts, favor a more aggressive response to maintaining America's primacy in
international relations. Mead says that both groups share a distaste for
"liberal internationalism".
Fundraising and support
Sarah Palin
headlined four "Liberty at the Ballot Box" bus tours, to raise money
for candidates and the Tea Party Express. One of the tours visited 30 towns and
covered 3,000 miles. Following the formation of the Tea Party Caucus, Michele
Bachmann raised $10 million for a political action committee, MichelePAC,
and sent funds to the campaigns of Sharron Angle, Christine O'Donnell, Rand
Paul, and Marco Rubio.
In September 2010, the Tea Party Patriots announced it had received a
$1,000,000 USD
donation from an anonymous donor.
Koch Industry influence
Main article: Political activities of the
Koch family
In an August
30, 2010, article in The New Yorker, Jane Mayer
said that the billionaire brothers David
H. Koch and Charles G. Koch and Koch
Industries are providing financial and organizational support to the Tea
Party movement through Americans for Prosperity, which David
founded. The AFP's "Hot Air Tour" was organized to fight against
taxes on carbon use and the activation of a cap and
trade program. In 1984, David Koch also founded Citizens for a Sound Economy, part of
which became FreedomWorks in a 2004 split, another group that
organized and supports the movement. Koch Industries issued a press release
stating that the Kochs have "no ties to and have never given money to
FreedomWorks". Former ambassador Christopher
Meyer writes in the Daily Mail that the Tea Party movement is a mix of
"grassroots populism, professional conservative politics, and big
money", the last supplied in part by Charles and David Koch. Jane Mayer
says that the Koch brothers' political involvement with the Tea Party has been
so secretive that she labels it "covert".
Impact on the 2010 election cycle
In 2010 Tea
Party-endorsed candidates upset established Republicans in several primaries,
such as Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Nevada, New York, South Carolina
and Utah, giving a new momentum to the conservative cause in the 2010
elections. In the 2010 midterm elections, The New York Times has
identified 138 candidates for Congress with significant Tea Party support, and
reported that all of them were running as Republicans—of whom 129 are running
for the House and 9 for the Senate. The Wall Street Journal-NBC
News poll in mid October showed 35% of likely voters were Tea-party supporters,
and they favored the Republicans by 84% to 10%.
However the
effectiveness of the Tea Party to endorse candidates has come into question as
only 32% of the candidates that were backed by the Tea Party won the election
For a list of
Tea Party politicians, see List of Tea Party politicians
·
On January 19, 2010, Republican Scott Brown
was elected as the U.S. senator from Massachusetts
in the special election held after Ted Kennedy's
death. The election was notable in that Massachusetts is normally a solidly
pro-Democratic state. Brown received Tea Party support.
·
Dean Murray, a Long Island
businessman, won a special election for a New York State Assembly seat. He is
believed to be the first Tea Party activist to be elected into office.
·
John Frullo won the nomination for the Texas District 84
seat vacated by the retiring Carl Isett, also a Republican. Frullo defeated
businessman Mark Griffin, a former Texas Tech University regent. He was elected
as a representative.
·
In Texas, April 13, 2010, Charles Perry won the GOP primary
against 86-year-old incumbent and fellow Republican Delwin
Jones in District 83 and is unopposed in the November 2 general election.
·
In Utah attorney Mike
Lee defeated establishment Republican U.S. Senator Bob Bennett (R-Utah) in the GOP senate
primary on May 8, 2010. Lee's win is seen as a victory for the Tea Party
Movement, whose supporters were against Bennett's return.
·
Rand Paul, endorsed by Tea Party groups, won the Super
Tuesday GOP Senate primary in Kentucky. Paul,
the son of Republican Congressman Ron Paul of
Texas, comfortably beat Republican establishment favorite Trey
Grayson with 60% of the vote. He was quoted saying, "The Tea Party
Movement is about saving our country from a mountain of debt." Rand won
his seat.
·
In the Republican primary in South
Dakota for the at-large Congressional seat, Kristi Noem,
a Tea Party-approved candidate, defeated incumbent Secretary of State Chris
Nelson and state representative Blake Curd.
·
In the South
Carolina first Congressional District GOP Primary, Tea Party favorite Tim Scott, defeated two establishment
Republicans with long family histories in Republican politics: Paul Thurmond,
son of the former South Carolina U.S. Senator Strom
Thurmond
and Carroll Campbell, son of former South Carolina Governor Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. Scott has spent
one term in the South Carolina House, where the businessman became the first African
American GOP representative in more than 100 years.
·
Nikki Haley, a 38-year-old Indian-American
state representative, beat out three prominent Republican rivals in the South
Carolina primary race for governor, capturing 49% of the vote. She defeated
the second-place finisher, U.S. Representative Gresham
Barrett, in a run-off election on June 22.
·
In Maine, Paul LePage won the GOP primary for governor.
·
In California, Chuck
DeVore, who had Tea Party backing, lost the GOP senate primary to Carly
Fiorina, who had backing from Sarah Palin.
But she lost on November 2, 2010, to Boxer.
·
In New Jersey, Anna
C. Little defeated Republican "establishment" candidate Diane
Gooch in the Republican congressional primary for the 6th Congressional District
on June 8, 2010. Little will face Democratic Congressman Frank
Pallone in November. Pallone defeated Little by over 16,000 votes, 55% to
43%.
·
In Nevada, Sharron Angle won the U.S. Senate Republican primary
race, defeating the GOP favorite, Sue Lowden,
the one-time front runner. Angle was
defeated by Senate Majority
Leader Harry
Reid.
·
In Arizona Jesse Kelly beat state Sen. Jonathan Paton, the
National Republican Congressional Committee's preferred candidate, in the
August primary for the party's nomination in congressional district 8. He lost the general election to incumbent Gabrielle Giffords.
·
In Alaska, attorney Joe Miller defeated current U.S.
Senator Lisa Murkowski, in the GOP primary race on August
24, 2010. Murkowski had been appointed to the seat by her father, Alaska Governor Frank
Murkowski, who had held the Senate seat for 30 years prior to becoming
governor. Murkowski remained in the election as a write-in candidate,
eventually beating Miller in the general election.
·
In Delaware, Tea Party-backed candidate Christine O'Donnell defeated veteran
Representative Mike Castle in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate. Her victory was a surprising upset and was
seen as a sign of Tea Party movement strength. O'Donnell lost the election.
·
In New York, Tea Party-backed candidate Carl
Paladino defeated former Representative Rick Lazio
in the Republican primary for governor; at the November elections he was
defeated by Democrat candidate Andrew
Cuomo.
·
In Louisiana, in the last congressional primary of 2010, Tea
Party-endorsed Republican Jeff Landry of New Iberia defeated the establishment choice,
former Speaker of the
Louisiana House of Representatives Hunt Downer
by a 65–35 percent margin. Landry won the 2010 general election.
·
In Florida, tea party favorite Marco Rubio
defeated Independent and sitting governor Charlie
Crist for the U.S. Senate seat.
·
In Colorado, tea party favorite Ken Buck won
the GOP Senate primary, defeating Republican establishment candidate Lt.
Governor Jane Norton. In the November general election, Buck was defeated
by Senator Michael Bennett
Allegations of
Democratic candidates planting "fake" Tea Party candidates have
surfaced in Florida,
Michigan, New Jersey,
and Pennsylvania.
Impact on the 2012 election cycle
Herman Cain
In February
2011, the Tea Party Patriots organized and hosted the American Policy Summit in
Phoenix, Arizona. The 1,600 attendees were polled regarding their preference
for a 2012 presidential candidate. Georgia radio host Herman Cain,
the first of the 2012 candidates to form a presidential exploratory committee,
won the poll with 22%. Runners up were Tim Pawlenty (16%), Ron Paul (15%) and
Sarah Palin (10%). Ron Paul won the Summit's online poll.
Public opinion
A USA Today/Gallup
poll conducted in March 2010, found that 28% of those surveyed considered
themselves supporters of the Tea Party movement, 26% were opponents, and 46%
were neither. These figures have remained stable through January 2011, as has
public opinion of the movement. In the USA Today/Gallup poll conducted
in January 2011, approximately 70% of adults, including approximately 9 out of
10 Republicans, feel Republican leaders in Congress should give consideration
to Tea Party movement ideas. A CBS News/New
York Times poll in September 2010, showed 19% of respondents supported the
movement, 63% did not, and 16% said they did not know. In the same poll, 29%
had an unfavorable view of the Tea Party, compared to 23% with a favorable
view. The Center for American Progress, a
progressive group, used this poll to assert that the Tea Party movement holds
views that differ from those the general public. The Tea Party differed on
views related to Roe v. Wade, income taxes, and Obama. An NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll later the same month found 27% considered
themselves Tea Party supporters. In that poll, 42% said the Tea Party has been
good for the U.S. political system; 18% called it a bad thing. Those with an
unfavorable view of the Tea Party outnumbered those with a favorable view
36–30%. In comparison, the Democratic Party was viewed unfavorably by a 42–37%
margin, and the Republican Party by 43–31%.
A poll
conducted by Quinnipiac University found that only 13% of
national adults identified themselves as part of the Tea Party movement but
that the Tea Party had a positive opinion by a 28–23% margin with 49% who do
not know. A similar poll conducted by
the Winston Group found that 17% of American registered voters consider
themselves part of the Tea Party movement.
Reception
Obama administration
Barack Obama
signs the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act at the White House, March 23, 2010.
Polls found
that just 7% of Tea Party supporters approve of how Obama is doing his job
compared to 50% (as of April 2010) of the general public, and that roughly 77%
of supporters had voted for Obama's Republican opponent, John McCain
in 2008.
On April 19,
2009, Senior White House Adviser David Axelrod, when asked
about the Tea Party protests on CBS News, said, "I think any time that you have
severe economic conditions, there is always an element of disaffection that can
mutate into something that's unhealthy." He also noted, "The thing
that bewilders me is this President just cut taxes for ninety-five percent of
the American people. So I think the tea bags should be directed elsewhere,
because he certainly understands the burden that people face."[
On April 29,
2009, Obama commented on the Tea Party protests publicly during a townhall
meeting in Arnold, Missouri, saying: "[W]hen you see,
you know... those of you who are watching certain news channels on which I'm
not very popular — and you see folks waving tea bags around... let me just
remind them that I am happy to have a serious conversation about how we are
going to cut our health care costs down over the long term, how we're going to
stabilize Social Security. Claire
(McCaskill) and I are working diligently to do basically a thorough audit
of federal spending. But let's not play games and pretend that the reason is
because of the recovery act, because that's just a fraction of the overall
problem that we've got. We are going to have to tighten our belts, but we're
going to have to do it in an intelligent way. And we've got to make sure that
the people who are helped are working American families, and we're not suddenly
saying that the way to do this is to eliminate programs that help ordinary
people and give more tax cuts to the wealthy. We tried that formula for eight
years. It did not work. And I don't intend to go back to it."
On April 15,
2010, Obama touted his administration's tax cuts, noting the passage of 25
different tax cuts over the past year, including tax cuts for 95% of working
Americans. He then remarked, "So I've been a little amused over the last
couple of days where people have been having these rallies about taxes. You
would think they would be saying thank you. That's what you'd think."
On September
20, 2010, at a townhall discussion sponsored by CNBC, Obama said healthy
skepticism about government and spending was good, but it was not enough to
just say "Get control of spending", and he challenged the Tea Party
movement to get specific about how they would cut government debt and spending:
"And so the challenge, I think, for the Tea Party movement is to identify
specifically what would you do. It's not enough just to say, get control of
spending. I think it's important for you to say, I'm willing to cut veterans'
benefits, or I'm willing to cut Medicare or Social Security benefits, or I'm
willing to see these taxes go up. What you can't do—which is what I've been
hearing a lot from the other side—is say we're going to control government
spending, we're going to propose $4 trillion of additional tax cuts, and that
magically somehow things are going to work."
Commentaries on the movement
According to The
Atlantic, the three main groups that provide guidance and organization
for the protests, FreedomWorks, dontGO, and Americans for Prosperity, state that the
demonstrations are an organic movement. Law professor and commentator Glenn
Reynolds, best known as author of the Instapundit
political blog, argued in the New
York Post that: "These aren't the usual semiprofessional
protesters who attend antiwar and pro-union marches. These are people with real
jobs; most have never attended a protest march before. They represent a kind of
energy that our politics hasn't seen lately, and an influx of new
activists." Conservative political strategist Tim Phillips, now head of
Americans for Prosperity, has remarked that the Republican Party is "too
disorganized and unsure of itself to pull this off".
"Tea Party
supporters", says Patrik Jonsson of the Christian Science Monitor, "have
been called neo-Klansmen and knuckle-dragging hillbillies". Jonsson adds,
"demonizing tea party activists tends to energize the Democrats' left-of-center
base". He notes that "polls suggest that tea party activists are not
only more mainstream than many critics suggest, but that a majority of them are
women (primarily mothers), not angry white men". Jonsson quotes Juan
Williams saying that Tea Party's opposition to health reform was based on
self-interest rather than racism.
Matthew Continetti of The Weekly Standard has said: "There
is no single Tea Party. The name is an umbrella that encompasses many different
groups. Under this umbrella, you'll find everyone from the woolly fringe to Ron
Paul supporters, from Americans for Prosperity to religious conservatives,
independents, and citizens who never have been active in politics before. The
umbrella is gigantic."
Former Speaker of the
House Newt Gingrich speaks at the New York City Tea Party,
April 15, 2009.
Mark
Mardell of BBC
News, who has "spoken to many supporters of the Tea Party and been to
lots of rallies" has said that when he talks to Tea Party supporters for
more than a few minutes, "fury tends to dissolve into concern, worry about
the economic direction of the country, worry about the size of the government
and the level of taxation". While "many" supporters of what
Mardell calls the "hydra-headed" Tea Party combine their fiscal
and constitutional concerns with social issues associated with their Christian
beliefs, the unifying focus is on fiscal conservatism and the constitution
Former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich's political activist group American Solutions supports the protests, saying
on its website that they are "our chance to communicate our anger and
opposition to the irresponsible policies of politicians in Washington who have
failed to solve problems". Gingrich spoke at the New York City protest on
April 15.
Dan Gerstein, a
former Democratic political advisor, argued in Forbes that the
protests could have tapped into real feelings of disillusionment by American
moderates, but the protesters put forth too many incoherent messages.
Democratic Party Chairman Tim Kaine told CNN that Tea Party candidates will not
appeal to independent and moderate voters, and that their growing importance
within the Republican Party will help Democrats.
Ned Ryun,
president of American Majority, an organization that offers
training for many Tea Party activists, believes this movement is not about
political parties, stating, "It's very much anti-establishment at both
parties....They don't care about party labels." He has also said that
"I think we're getting to the point where you can truly say we're entering
a post-party era. They aren't going to be necessarily wed to a certain
party—they want to see leadership that reflects their values first.....They
don't care what party you're in; they just want to know if you reflect their
values—limited government, fixing the economy."
According to Arthur
C. Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute, a
conservative think tank, America is locked in a culture war between the country
as being an "exceptional nation organized around the principles of free
enterprise—limited government, a reliance on entrepreneurship and rewards
determined by market forces" or as a country determined by
"European-style statism". Brooks states that while some have tried to
criticize the tea party, they are part of an ideological movement to preserve
the former and oppose the latter.
In an April
2009 New York Times opinion column, contributor Paul
Krugman wrote that "the tea parties don't represent a spontaneous
outpouring of public sentiment. They're AstroTurf
(fake grassroots) events, manufactured by the usual suspects. In particular, a
key role is being played by FreedomWorks, an organization run by Richard Armey."[200][unreliable source?]
The same month, then Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi (D-California) stated "It's not really a grassroots
movement. It's astroturf by some of the wealthiest people in America to keep
the focus on tax cuts for the rich instead of for the great middle class"
In a September
2010 piece for Rolling Stone, journalist Matt Taibbi
wrote: "I've concluded that the whole miserable narrative boils down to
one stark fact: They're full of shit. ...[T]he Tea Party is a movement that
purports to be furious about government spending—only the reality is that the
vast majority of its members are former Bush supporters who yawned through two
terms of record deficits.... The average Tea Partier is sincerely against
government spending—with the exception of the money spent on them. In fact,
their lack of embarrassment when it comes to collecting government largesse is
key to understanding what this movement is all about...." Taibbi
concluded, "This, then, is the future of the Republican Party: Angry white
voters hovering over their cash-stuffed mattresses with their kerosene
lanterns, peering through the blinds at the oncoming hordes of suburban soccer
moms they've mistaken for death-panel bureaucrats bent on exterminating anyone
who isn't an illegal alien or a Kenyan anti-colonialist."
Observers have
compared the Tea Party movement to others in U.S. history, finding
commonalities with previous populist or nativist movements and third parties
such as the Know Nothing party, the John Birch Society,[204][205]
and the campaigns of Huey Long, Barry
Goldwater, George Wallace, and Ross Perot.
Two historians, Steve Fraser and Joshua B. Freeman, have written in Salon.com
that the Tea Party movement and anti-immigration movements share a "fear
of displacement". Historian Jill Lepore has described the movement as a
form of "historical fundamentalism", turning the founding into sacred
history and rejecting critical academic study of it. U.S. Senator Christopher
Dodd compared the movement to the Know Nothings, saying it seeks to roll
"the clock back to a point in time which they've sort of idealized in
their own minds as being a better time in America". Other commentators,
like Jacob Heilbrunn and Michael
Lind, predict that it will share the short life span of third parties in
U.S. history that have faded after altering the political order.
In March 2011 Ronald
Schiller, a National Public Radio fundraising executive
was secretly recorded during a lunch meeting with two men posing as potential
donors. On the recording, Schiller said that he would speak personally, and not
for NPR; then he contrasted the fiscally conservative Republican party of old
that didn't get involved in people's personal and family lives with "the
current Republican Party, in particular the Tea Party, that is fanatically
involved in people's personal lives and very fundamental Christian—I wouldn't
even call it Christian. It's this weird evangelical kind of move."
Schiller said some highly-placed Republicans believed the Republican Party had
been hijacked by this radical group, and characterized them as
"Islamophobic" and "seriously racist, racist people".
Media coverage
US News and World Report reported that the nature of the
coverage of the protests has become part of the story. On CNN's Situation Room, journalist Howard
Kurtz commented that "much of the media seems to have chosen
sides". He says that Fox News portrayed the protests "as a big story, CNN
as a modest story, and MSNBC as a great story to make fun of. And for most major
newspapers, it's a nonstory." There are reports that the movement has been
actively promoted by the Fox News Channel, indicating a possible media bias.
Tea Party
protesters walk towards the United States Capitol during the Taxpayer March on Washington,
September 12, 2009.
According to Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting,
a progressive
media watchdog, there is a disparity between large coverage of the Tea Party
movement and minimal coverage of larger movements. In 2009, the major Tea Party
protests were quoted twice as often as the National Equality March despite a much lower
turnout. In 2010, a Tea Party protest was covered 59 times more than the US
Social Forum (177 Tea Party mentions versus 3 for Social Forum) despite an
attendance that was 25 times smaller in size (600 Tea Party attendees versus at
least 15,000 for Social Forum).
In April 2010,
responding to a question from the media watchdog group Media Matters posed the previous week, Rupert
Murdoch, the chief executive of News
Corporation, which owns Fox News, said, "I don't think we should be
supporting the Tea Party or any other party." That same week Fox News
canceled an appearance by Sean Hannity at a Cincinnati
Tea Party rally.
Following the
September 12 Taxpayer March on Washington, Fox News
said it was the only cable news outlet to cover the emerging protests and took
out full-page ads in The Washington Post, the New
York Post, and The Wall Street Journal with a
prominent headline reading, "How did ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, and CNN miss
this story?" CNN news anchor Rick
Sanchez disputed Fox's assertion, pointing to various coverage of the
event. CNN, NBC, CBS, MSNBC, and CBS Radio News provided various forms of live
coverage of the rally in Washington throughout the day on Saturday, including
the lead story on CBS Evening News.
James Rainey of
the Los Angeles Times said MSNBC's attacks on the
tea parties paled compared to Fox's support, but that MSNBC personalities Keith
Olbermann, Rachel Maddow and Chris
Matthews were hardly subtle in disparaging the movement. Howard
Kurtz has said that, "These [FOX] hosts said little or nothing about
the huge deficits run up by President
Bush, but Barack Obama's budget and tax plans have driven them to tea. On
the other hand, CNN and MSNBC may have dropped the ball by all but ignoring the
protests."
Tea Party's views of media coverage
In October 2010,
a survey conducted by The Washington Post found that the majority
of local Tea Party organizers consider the media coverage of their groups to be
fair. Seventy-six percent of the local organizers said media coverage has been
fair while twenty-three percent have said coverage was unfair. This was based
on responses from all 647 local Tea Party organizers the Post was able
to contact and verify, from a list of more than 1,400 possible groups
identified.
Racial issues
Black conservatives
have expressed mixed feelings about the Tea Party's inclusiveness and concerns
about racism.
Brandon Brice, a primary black speaker at a tax-day Tea Party rally, said he
was worried about the movement, noting that, "It's strayed away from the
message of wasteful spending and Washington not listening to its constituents,
and it's become more of this rally of hate." Lenny
McAllister, a Republican commentator, author and Tea Party supporter, said
he has seen racism within the movement and has confronted it by approaching
people with racially derogatory signs of President Obama and asking them to
take the signs down. Like Brice, McAllister thinks leaders of the Tea Party
movement must not ignore the issue. McAllister told The Washington Post, "The people are
speaking up and becoming more educated on the issues, but you have fringe
elements that are defining this good thing with their negative, hateful
behavior." He said the movement is more diverse than news clips show,
commenting that "There is this perception that these are all old, white
racists and that's not the case." Jean Howard-Hill, leader of the National
Republican African American Caucus, wrote that, "Any movement which cannot
openly denounce racism, calling it out as wrong troubles me. To attack
President Obama on his policy is one thing, but to do so on his race or some
hysterical pretext of socialism is yet another." During an interview on NPR with Michel
Martin, McAllister and columnist Cynthia
Tucker discussed racism and the Tea Parties; Tucker wrote about the
interview, concluding that McAllister's take on racism was that he'd seen
enough racist signs at other Tea Party gatherings to know that racism is
associated with the movement.
Black
Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain
said that racist accusations about the Tea Party Movement are
"ridiculous". "I have been speaking to Tea Parties, Americans for
Prosperity, since 2009, before it was cool," Cain said, and then,
referring to his victories in recent Tea Party Straw polls, "...If the Tea
Party organization is racist, why does the black guy keep winning all these
straw polls?" Cain went on to say that while he doesn't feel President
Obama used race to get elected, "a lot of his supporters use race
selectively to try to cover up some of his failures, to try to cover up some of
his failed policies." Cain said Obama's surrogates "try to play the
race card because there's supposed to be something wrong with criticizing
him", and concluded, "Some people have tried to use [race] to try to
give the president a pass on failed policies, bad decisions and the fact that
this economy is not doing what it's supposed to do."
Another
prominent African-American conservative, Ward
Connerly, decried accusations of Tea Party racism and defended the movement
in a National Review column: "Race is the
engine that drives the political Left. In the courtrooms, on college campuses,
and, most especially, in our politics, race is a central theme. Where it does
not naturally rise to the surface, there are those who will manufacture and
amplify it," Connerly said. "I am convinced beyond any doubt that all
of this is part of the strategic plan being implemented by the Left in its
current campaign to remake America."
Tea Party
protesters during the Taxpayer March on Washington,
September 12, 2009.
About 61
percent of Tea Party opponents say racism has a lot to do with the movement, a
view held by just 7 percent of Tea Party supporters. Some Tea Partiers blame
the media for casting them as racists. Allen West, one of 32 African-Americans who
ran for Congress in 2010 as Republicans, says the notion of racism in the Tea
Party movement has been made up by the news media. The Washington Post
reported that an analysis of the signs displayed at a September 2010 Tea Party
rally found that "the vast majority of activists expressed narrow concerns
about the government's economic and spending policies and steered clear of the
racially charged anti-Obama messages that have helped define some media
coverage of such events". Roughly a quarter of the signs "reflected
direct anger with Obama", 5 percent "mentioned the president's race
or religion, and slightly more than 1 percent questioned his American
citizenship" The researcher, Emily Elkins, did not conclude that "the
racially charged messages" were "unimportant", but she did
conclude that "media coverage of tea party rallies over the past year have
focused so heavily on the more controversial signs that it has contributed to
the perception that such content dominates the tea party movement more than it
actually does". A report published in the fall 2010 by the Institute for
Research and Education on Human Rights and backed by the NAACP
has found what it says are efforts by white nationalist groups and militias to link
themselves to the Tea Party movement. White nationalists have attempted to recruit
new members at Tea Party events. Steve Smith, Pennsylvania Party Chairman of
the white nationalist American Third Position Party, has called
Tea Party events "fertile ground for our activists".
Specific racial slurs
While at a Tea
Party event on February 27, 2009, a photo was taken of TeaParty.org founder and
president Dale Robertson with a sign that said "Congress = Slaveowner,
Taxpayer = Niggar"
It has been reported that he was ejected from the event because of the
offensive nature of the sign, and Houston Tea Party Society leaders ousted him
from the society shortly after. It was reported that Robertson intended to sell
the domain TeaParty.org; however, as of May 2011
he is named the "President & Founder" on the TeaParty.org
"Founder" section.
Music-related racial slurs
On March 21,
2010, Springboro (Ohio) Tea Party founder Sonny Thomas posted a racial slur on
the Springboro Tea Party Twitter webpage he managed, directed specifically at
the Hispanic
community that stated "Illegals everywhere today! So many spics makes me
feel like a speck. Grrr. Wheres my gun!?"
Response
On April 14,
2010, according to CNN anchor Rick Sanchez, when CNN contacted Thomas to ask
for an explanation, Thomas stated, "As I am a lifetime music lover of all
genres, I always have some sort of song that can fit almost any occasion or
situation. ... Coincidentally, the song 'Spicks and Specks' had been on my
player. ... I made the reference to the song, not stopping to think of the era
that it was produced from and taken out of context could be so offensive to
some people.” The posting triggered
cancellations by several local and statewide political candidates and leaders
scheduled to speak at a Springboro Tea Party rally on April 17. An Ohio
Republican state Sen. Shannon Jones boycotted the rally and stated, "I
don't think it says anything about the movement per se". A Dayton Tea
Party official, Rob Scott, claimed that the posts were "classless"
and did not represent the national Tea Party movement as a whole.
Reports of slurs at health care reform protests
On March 20,
2010, before the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Bill was voted on by lawmakers, it was reported that
protesters against the bill used racial and homophobic slurs at a rally at the United States Capitol in Washington,
D.C. Several black lawmakers said that demonstrators shouted "nigger" at
them, Congressman Emanuel Cleaver said he heard the slurs and was
spat upon. Congressman Barney Frank, who is gay, was called a "faggot".
Representative André Carson said that while walking with John Lewis and his chief of staff from
the Cannon building, amid chants of "Kill
the bill" he heard the "n-word at least 15 times". Carson said
he heard it coming from different places in the crowd, and one man "just
rattled it off several times" Carson quoted Lewis as saying, "You
know, this reminds me of a different time." Heath
Shuler, a Democratic U.S. representative from North Carolina commented on
the tenor of the protests, saying: "It was the most horrible display of protesting
I have ever seen in my life." He also confirmed hearing the slur against
Frank.
Response
According to The Washington Post three weeks after the
incidents, video and audio proof of racial slurs against Lewis and Carson had
yet to emerge, and conservative commentator and blogger Andrew
Breitbart insisted the charges were made up. "If so, they're good
actors," Andrew Alexander, ombudsman for the Post, said, explaining that
reporters described Carson as "trembling", "agitated",
"angry" and "emotional" as he recounted what had just
happened. Carson implored the reporters to step back outside to witness and
document the taunts, but Capitol police prevented them. Andrew Breitbart
offered to make a $100,000 donation to the United Negro College Fund for any
audio/video footage of the N-word being hurled at Congressman John Lewis or if
Lewis could pass a lie-detector test. "It didn't happen," said
Breitbart, who wasn't there. Breitbart asserted that the racial slurs were only
alleged as a way for the left, abetted by the "progressive" media, to
"marginalize" Tea Party supporters. To support his assertions,
Breitbart had posted a mislabeled 48-second video of the Congressional Black Caucus members on
the day in question, but later analysis revealed that the video was not of
Lewis and Carson walking to the Capitol, when the slurs were reportedly heard,
but instead showed the lawmakers leaving the Capitol—at least one hour after
the reported incident. When asked about using the video from the wrong moment
on his website, Breitbart stood by his claim that the lawmakers were lying.
"I'm not saying the video was conclusive proof," he said.
In response to
Breitbart's allegations, AFL-CIO president Richard
Trumka said he had witnessed the events in question, stating, "I
watched them spit at people, I watched them call John Lewis the n-word. I
witnessed it." Fox News' Bill O'Reilly discussed the
issue on four of his shows, beginning on March 22. O'Reilly stated, "Just
because it's not on tape doesn't mean it's fabricated.”
Economist and
prominent black conservative Thomas
Sowell told The Washington Post, "This is a serious charge —
and one deserving of some serious evidence... But, despite all the media
recording devices on the scene, not to mention recording devices among the
crowd gathered there, nobody can come up with a single recorded sound to back
up that incendiary charge. Worse yet, some people have claimed that even
doubting the charge suggests that you are a racist."
The National Tea Party Federation sent a
letter to the Congressional Black Caucus denouncing
racism and requesting that the CBC supply any evidence of the alleged events at
the protest on March 20, 2010.
House
Republican leaders criticized the use of slurs against the Democratic
congressmen by the protesters, but said they were isolated incidents that
should not overshadow the healthcare debate. House Minority Leader John
Boehner called the incidents "reprehensible", and House Minority
Whip Eric
Cantor said, "Nobody condones that at all. There were 30,000 people
here in Washington yesterday. And, yes, there were some very awful things
said." As demonstrators gathered the following day outside the Capitol to
rally against the bill again, one held a sign saying, "All tea partiers:
If you hear a racial slur, step away, point, boo and take a picture of the rat
bastard."
Mark Williams anti-Islam comments
Tea Party
Express leader Mark Williams referred to Allah as a
"Monkey God". Williams' comments elicited strong rebukes from New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New York state senators and Muslim leaders. In
a subsequent blog posting, Williams wrote, "I owe an apology to millions
of Hindus who worship Lord Hanuman, an actual Monkey God. Hanuman is worshiped
as a symbol of perseverance, strength, and devotion ... Those are hardly the
traits of whatever the Hell (literally) it is that terrorists worship."
When questioned by The Washington Post about his comments about Islam, Williams has
claimed the controversy has "been fantastic for the movement".
Williams came
under further criticism in mid-July when he posted a fictional letter named
"Colored People" on his blog. Williams claimed the letter was a
"satirical" response to a resolution passed by the NAACP calling on Tea
Party leaders to "'repudiate the racist element and activities' from
within the movement". In response, the National Tea Party Federation
"demanded that the Tea Party Express—a separate group—oust Williams from
its ranks. When it did not, the Federation expelled both Williams and his
conservative outfit."
Use of term "teabagger"
The term "teabagger"
emerged after a protester displayed a placard using the words "tea
bag" as a verb. The label has prompted additional puns by commentators,
the protesters themselves, and comedians based on the sexual meaning of the term. It is routinely
used as a derogatory term to refer to conservative protestors.
The term has
also entered into the political debate; supposed or actual supporters of the
tea-party movement have been referred to as "tea-baggers" by
politicians such as Senators John F.
Kerry and Chuck Schumer as well as by President Obama.
Other controversies
On March 22,
2010, a Lynchburg, Virginia, Tea Party activist,
attempting to post the home address of Representative Tom
Perriello on his blog, incorrectly posted the address of Perriello's
brother, who also lives in Virginia, and encouraged readers to "drop
by" to express their anger against Representative Perriello's vote in
favor of the healthcare bill. The following day, a severed gas line was
discovered in Perriello's brother's yard that connected to a propane
grill on the home's screened-in porch. Local police and FBI investigators
determined that it was intentionally cut as a deliberate act of vandalism.
Perriello's brother also received a threatening letter. The website issued a
response saying the Tea Party member's action of posting the address "was
not requested, sanctioned or endorsed" by the group.
In early July
2010, the North Iowa Tea Party (NITP) posted a billboard comparing Obama to Adolf
Hitler and Vladimir Lenin and received sharp criticism,
including some from other Tea Party activists. NITP co-founder Bob Johnson
acknowledged the anti-socialist message may have gotten lost amid the fascist
and communist images. Following a request from the NITP, the billboard was
removed on July 14.
See also
Notes
1.
Halloran, Liz (February 5, 2010). "What's
Behind The New Populism?". NPR. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123137382.
2.
Barstow, David (February 16, 2010). "Tea
Party Lights Fuse for Rebellion on Right". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/16/us/politics/16teaparty.html.
3.
Fineman, Howard (April 06, 2010). "Party Time".
Newsweek. http://www.newsweek.com/2010/04/05/party-time.html.
4.
Morris, Dick (October 19, 2010). "The
New Republican Right". The Hill. http://thehill.com/opinion/columnists/dick-morris/124885-the-new-republican-right.
5.
See following for information on Tea Party Movement
Conservatism:
§
Tea
party, religious right often overlap, poll shows The Washington Post,
October 5, 2010
§
Sarah
Palin's 'mamas': more grisly than grizzly The Guardian, October 25,
2010
6.
Servatius, David (March 6, 2009). "Anti-tax-and-spend
group throws "tea party" at Capitol". Deseret
News. http://deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,705289328,00.html.
Retrieved June 16, 2009.
7.
"Anger
Management". The Economist. March 5, 2009. http://www.economist.com/world/unitedstates/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13235069.
Retrieved April 25, 2010.
8.
Tapscott, Mark (March 19, 2009). "Tea
parties are flash crowds Obama should fear". The San Francisco Examiner. http://www.sfexaminer.com/opinion/Tea-parties-are-flash-crowds-Obama-should-fear-41547632.html.
Retrieved June 16, 2009.
9.
Gallup:
Tea Party's top concerns are debt, size of government The Hill, July
5, 2010
10.
Tea
Party DC March: "Lower Taxes and Less Spending" Fiscal Times,
September 12, 2010
11.
Liptak, Mark (March 13, 2010). "Tea-ing
Up the Constitution". The New York Times (Washington, D.C.). http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/weekinreview/14liptak.html.
Retrieved October 31, 2010. "It is, of course, hard to say anything
definitive about the Tea Party movement, a loose confederation of groups with
no central leadership, But if there is a central theme to its understanding of
the Constitution, it is that the nation's founders knew what they were doing
and that their work must be protected."
12.
Lepore, Jill (2010). The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea
Party's Revolution and the Battle over American History. Princeton
University Press. pp. 77–79. ISBN 978-0691150277.
13.
Politco,
April 08 2009 "T.E.A. = Taxed Enough Already"
14.
This
World: Tea Party America, BBC 2, 1 November 2010
15.
Senate
Tea Party Caucus to Meet Jan. 27 Roll Call, Jan. 14, 2011. Retrieved
2011-01-29.
16.
Rasmussen, Scott W.; Schoen, Doug. Mad As Hell: How
the Tea Party Movement Is Fundamentally Remaking Our Two-Party System.
Harper. pp. 132–136. ISBN 978-0-06-199523-1.
17.
Smith, James F. (December 16, 2007). "Ron
Paul's tea party for dollars". The Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2007/12/ron_pauls_tea_p.html.
18.
[1]
19.
Rasmussen, Scott; Schoen, Doug (2010). Mad As Hell:
How the Tea Party Movement Is Fundamentally Remaking Our Two-Party System.
HarperCollins. p. 12. ISBN 9780061995231.
20.
"Tea
Party Supporters Overlap Republican Base". Gallup Poll. July 2, 2010. http://www.gallup.com/poll/141098/Tea-Party-Supporters-Overlap-Republican-Base.aspx?version=print.
Retrieved November 24, 2010.
21.
"The
Fix - Tea Party = Republican party?". The Washington Post. Washington
Post. July 6, 2010. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/thefix/republican-party/tea-party-as-the-republican-pa.html.
Retrieved November 24, 2010.
22.
The
GOP Takes its Tea; Los Angeles Times; July 25, 2010
23.
Five Myths
About the Tea Party Slate; August 9, 2010
24.
Tea
Party canvass results, Category: "What They Believe" A Party Face
Washington Post October 24, 2010. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
25.
"Libertarians to plan tea party to protest
tax". The Daily News. Associated Press
(Bowling Green, Kentucky). April 5, 1984.
26.
Michael Holmes (July 12, 1991). "Republicans
urge tea for Texas/Legislators seek cuts before taxes". Houston
Chronicle. Associated Press. http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl/1991_796548/republicans-urge-tea-for-texas-legislators-seek-cu.html.
Retrieved July 6, 2011.
27.
"Tea
bag protesters would toss away state's future" (Fee required). Austin
American-Statesman. July 24, 1991. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=AASB&p_theme=aasb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_hidethis=no&p_field_label-0=Author&p_field_label-1=title&p_bool_label-1=AND&p_text_label-1=Tea%20bag%20protesters%20would%20toss%20away%20state%27s%20future&s_dispstring=headline%28Tea%20bag%20protesters%20would%20toss%20away%20state%27s%20future%29%20AND%20date%28all%29&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no.
Retrieved April 23, 2010.
28.
"Smith refuses to defend tax proposition".
Associated Press. Boca Raton News. July 14, 1983.
29.
"Demonstrators
hurl tea bags in bid against raising taxes". Associated Press.
Victoria Advocate. July 23, 1991. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=esYcAAAAIBAJ&sjid=51kEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7010,4383884&hl=en.
Retrieved April 23, 2010.
30.
"'Tea
Party' Protests Taxation, But Don't Expect A Revolution" (Fee
required). October 20, 1991. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=MH&s_site=miami&p_multi=MH&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB344E5F94DCCDC&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM.
Retrieved April 23, 2010.
31.
"Boston
Tea Party Is Protest Template". UPI. UPI.com. April 20, 2008. http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2008/04/20/Boston-Tea-Party-is-protest-template/UPI-96411208726823/.
32.
Levenson, Michael (December 16, 2007). "Ron
Paul raises millions in today's Boston Tea Party event". Boston.com. http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2007/12/16/ron_paul_raises_millions_in_todays_boston_tea_party_event/.
Retrieved April 9, 2010.
33.
"Paul
supporters hold Tea Party re-enactment in Boston". Associated Press.
Boston Herald. December 17, 2007. http://www.bostonherald.com/news/us_politics/view.bg?articleid=1051232.
Retrieved April 23, 2010.
34.
Levenson, Michael (December 16, 2007). "Ron
Paul's tea party for dollars". Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2007/12/ron_pauls_tea_p.html.
Retrieved April 23, 2010.
35.
"JUAN
WILLIAMS: The Surprising Rise of Rep. Ron Paul". Fox News. May
10, 2011. http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/05/10/juan-williams-surprising-rise-rep-ron-paul/.
36.
A
"tea party" to protest Paterson's taxes YNN — Your News Now, January
24, 2009
37.
Barnes, Tom (March 8, 2009). "Harrisburg
Tea Party protests ongoing bailout". Local/State
(Post-Gazette.com). http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09067/954066-454.stm.
Retrieved April 9, 2010.
38.
Ferrara, Peter (April 15, 2009). "The
Tea Party Revolution". The American Spectator. http://spectator.org/archives/2009/04/15/the-tea-party-revolution.
Retrieved June 18, 2009.
39.
Seleny, Jeff (September 12, 2009). "Thousands
Rally in Capital to Protest Big Government". The New York Times.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/13/us/politics/13protestweb.html.
Retrieved September 28, 2009.
40.
Evan McMorris-Santoro,"The
Town Hall Dog That Didn't Bite", Talking Points Memo, DC, April 5, 2010.
41.
Zernike, Kate (February 27, 2010). "Unlikely
Activist Who Got to the Tea Party Early". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28keli.html/.
Retrieved April 25, 2010. "But leaders of the Tea Party movement credit
her with being the first"
42.
Good, Chris (February 4, 2010). "Is
Palin's Tea Party Speech A Mistake? Tea Partiers Have Mixed Opinions".
The Atlantic. http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2010/02/is-palins-tea-party-speech-a-mistake-tea-partiers-have-mixed-opinions/35360/.
Retrieved April 25, 2010. "Keli Carender, 30, of Seattle, who is credited
with hosting one of the first ever Tea Party protests in February of 2009,
before the movement really got started. — Chris Good"
43.
Kaste, Martin (February 2, 2010). "Tea
Party Star Leads Movement On Her Own Terms". National Public Radio. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123229743.
Retrieved April 25, 2010. "Keli Carender ... organized some of the
earliest Tea Party-style protests—before they were even called Tea Party
protests"
44.
KIRO Tv (February 16, 2009). "Video: Dozens
Gather At 'Porkulus' Protest" (Video). http://www.kirotv.com/video/18727718/index.html.
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References
·
Rasmussen, Scott; Schoen, Doug (2010). Mad As Hell:
How the Tea Party Movement Is Fundamentally Remaking Our Two-Party System.
Harper. ISBN 978-0061995231.
Further reading
·
Perryman, Rev. Wayne: Whites, Blacks and Racist
Democrats, Book Publishers Network; 1st edition (March 10, 2010) ,ISBN-10: 9781935359302
·
Avlon, John; with Forward by Tina Brown (2010). Wingnuts:
How the Lunatic Fringe is Hijacking America. Beast Books. ISBN 978-0984295111.
·
Lepore, Jill (2010). The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea
Party's Revolution and the Battle over American History. Princeton, New
Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3696-3.
·
O'Hara, John M.; with Forward by Michelle Malkin (2010). A
New American Tea Party: The Counterrevolution Against Bailouts, Handouts,
Reckless Spending, and More Taxes. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley &
Sons. ISBN 978-0470567982.
·
Pierce, Charles (2010). Idiot America: How Stupidity
Became a Virtue in the Land of the Free. Anchor. ISBN 978-0767926157.
·
Taibbi, Matt (2010). The Great Derangement: A
Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion. Spiegel & Grau. ISBN 978-0385520348.
·
Zernike, Kate (2010). Boiling Mad: Inside Tea Party
America. Times Books. ISBN 978-0805093483.