Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Mother’s Day Tea Party at the Phelps-Hatheway House & Garden – WTNH Connecticut News (press release)


WTNH Connecticut News (press release)
Mother's Day Tea Party at the Phelps-Hatheway House & Garden
WTNH Connecticut News (press release)
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) Mother's Day is just one week away and this morning Lynn Mervosh stopped by our studio to talk about the CT landmarks Mother's Day Tea Party at the Phelps-Hatheway House and Garden. To learn more about the event ...

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Mother's Day Tea Party at the Phelps-Hatheway House & Garden - WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

Riding sanctuary success, Tea Party-aligned caucus still loud and proud – Fort Worth Star Telegram


Fort Worth Star Telegram
Riding sanctuary success, Tea Party-aligned caucus still loud and proud
Fort Worth Star Telegram
Emboldened by their influence on a sanctuary cities bill now awaiting Gov. Greg Abbott's signature, members of the Tea Party-aligned House Freedom Caucus are planning a final insurgent push through the remaining three weeks of the Texas Legislature ...

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Riding sanctuary success, Tea Party-aligned caucus still loud and proud - Fort Worth Star Telegram

SWM Tea Party Leader Talks GOP Healthcare Bill – News/Talk 94.9 WSJM

Some southwest Michigan conservatives are not pleased with the healthcare bill approved this week by the U.S. House of Representatives. Van-Kal Tea Party Patriots Chair Gene Clem tells WSJM News they got together Thursday, and he doesnt recall one member supporting the plan. The problem, he tells us, is that itkeeps the government involved in healthcare, rather than letting the free market sort it all out. He says the House GOP dropped the ball on the issue of healthcare reform

There were solutions available that were very acceptable, Clem said. They decided to ignore them. They told everybody that there wasnt any. So, people are just feeling that theyve been lied to. They got the Tea Party people up in arms to vote for them again, and then theyve pulled the football away, just like Lucy.

Clem says the latest GOP plan just muddies the water. Hes not surprised Congressman Fred Upton voted for it, but is surprised Congressman Justin Amash supported it.

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SWM Tea Party Leader Talks GOP Healthcare Bill - News/Talk 94.9 WSJM

TEA Party will meet next in Moultonborough on Wednesday, May 17 – The Laconia Daily Sun

To The Daily Sun, The Lakes Region TEA Party will meet at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17 at the Moultonborough Library. Our speakers will include State Representative Norman Silber (Gilford & Meredith) and Jim Thompson. Representative Silber will discuss recent changes to New Hampshire's gun laws and continuing threats to our Second Amendment rights. Despite the new pro-Second Amendment administration, special interest groups and people who only want criminals to have guns are trying harder than ever to take guns away from law-abiding citizens. Jim Thompson will update us about the Refugee Resettlement Program and other local and state efforts related to refugees in New Hampshire.

We will also get an update on important legislative actions in Concord.

The Moultonborough Library is located at 4 Holland Street. The public is invited to attend to listen, learn, and respectfully participate in our discussions.

Don Ewing Meredith

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TEA Party will meet next in Moultonborough on Wednesday, May 17 - The Laconia Daily Sun

David Colburn: Will Trump and tea party partnership last? – Gainesville Sun

By David Colburn Special to The Sun

In 2009, I was in Akron, Ohio, and happened upon a tea party rally nearby. I had read about thetea party movement but I had not seen or attended a gathering of its supporters. So, I decided to take a few minutes before dinner to see what the fuss was all about.

A speaker was denouncing the policies of the Obama administration and the dismal state of the national economy. Almost all of those in attendance were white and looked to be struggling financially. They were people I could relate to since my family had been working class and I had worked alongside them unloading trucks and trains in Providence, Rhode Island, to pay my way through college.

My first impression of the movement in Akron was not positive. The few speakers I listened to had little to offer but complaints about the federal government for ignoring the plight of the working poor. But they offered no specific plans to ease the unemployment rate or combat declining salaries and called on the crowd to join them in throwing the bums out of Washington.

From what little I observed at the rally, I thought this was a movement that would struggle to be successful and I mentioned that to those I had dinner with that evening. They generally agreed with me.

But thetea party would go on to prove us wrong. Aided by Republican strategists and spokesmen who saw thetea party as a way to re-energize the Republican Party, activists gained additional traction among other whites who were attracted to the populist appeal of the tea party.

This modern-day Populist movement sought to mobilize working class voters against the money power in the United States, which they felt controlled the economy and dominated the political leadership of the nation to the detriment of the working class.

Tea partymembers and Donald Trump's campaign joined forces in support of a reduction in government spending, a stronger economy, fewer federal regulations, lower taxes, the repeal of the Affordable Care Act and tighter immigration controls. Their collaboration proved instrumental in Trumps election as president in 2016, turning out their working class political base in record numbers.

While the affiliation with Trump energized the tea party and enhanced its visibility, it also had its downside. Trump was not a dedicatedtea party loyalist. His book, The Art of the Deal, made clear that he was prepared to compromise if it would secure those programs he valued most.

By contrast, thetea party has been known for its steadfast position on various issues and would not brook compromise on its principles. In his first 100 days, Trump switched positions so frequently that many tea party leaders were not sure what he stood for and some concluded he was unreliable.

How long this partnership lasts remains to be seen. So far most white workers seem willing to stick with Trump, even if he frustrates them on many of their core concerns. His distortion of events and repeated accusations of fake news, however, are a shallow foundation on which to maintain a coalition, much less secure a better future for the working class.

David Colburn is a history professor emeritus and director of the Bob Graham Center for Public Service at the University of Florida. He is the author of "From Yellow Dog Democrats to Red State Republicans."

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David Colburn: Will Trump and tea party partnership last? - Gainesville Sun