Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Letter: I would like to attend a Tea Party meeting – Historic City News

HomeEditorialsLetter: I would like to attend a Tea Party meeting

February 28, 2017 Editorials

Terry Buckenmeyer St Augustine, FL

Dear Historic City News Editor,

On January 30th, Indivisible St Johns held its first meeting. We were expecting about 50 people and hundreds showed up.

One gentleman, from the Tea Party, came to express his opposition. I would like to express my respect for his courage. To be the sole opposition in the midst of so many is inspiring.

Initially, there was resistance to his speaking. However, freedom of speech won the day. He made his argument in the time allotted and did it eloquently.

After the meeting, we had a chance to speak very briefly too many people, too many questions. I do not remember his name.

That is unfortunate as it appears that we had at least one thing in common. A point to begin discussion without belittling or name calling. If we can discuss with respect for difference of opinion, we might at some point find solutions that are mutually acceptable.

So, I would like to attend a Tea Party meeting. Not to belittle or harass. I would like to attend to learn and understand. I most likely will not change my mind. I will, however, learn what your world is like, what your fears are, what concerns you.

I believe that we the people, together, can discuss, argue and debate. I believe that we have the collective intelligence, creativity and ingenuity to figure out mutually agreeable solutions to the problems we face.

For those who disagree with my demand that he be given the right to speak, a line from the Billy Bragg/Pete Seeger modernization of the English version of the Internationale. Freedom, unless enjoyed by all, is merely privilege extended.

Letter: Castillo rally was proud day for all of us

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Letter: I would like to attend a Tea Party meeting - Historic City News

In A Virginia Swing District, Liberals Look To The Tea Party For Lessons In Activism – WAMU 88.5


WAMU 88.5
In A Virginia Swing District, Liberals Look To The Tea Party For Lessons In Activism
WAMU 88.5
She began by reading the Indivisible Guide, a handbook written by former congressional staffers that spells out how to build a grassroots movement. The guide borrows from the conservative Tea Party, an effort credited with shifting Republican politics ...

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In A Virginia Swing District, Liberals Look To The Tea Party For Lessons In Activism - WAMU 88.5

Curtis Loftis To Address New Greenville Tea Party | FITSNews – FITSNews

GOP OFFICIAL HEADED TO PALMETTO UPSTATE

S.C. treasurer Curtis Loftis will bethe guest of honor at the March meeting of the New Greenville Tea Party.

Loftis will speak about the overall status of the states finances, the prevailing spend, borrow and tax attitude among our legislators, and the pending proposals to repair and maintain our roadways, an advisory from the organization noted.

Thesecond-term Republican statewide official has areputation for straight talk and an aggressive posture towards malfeasance, misfeasance and downright corruption among legislators and bureaucrats alike, the group added.

We concur

This website has been effusive in its praise of Loftis over the years. Weve also been relentless in our criticism of the excessive spending and borrowing of liberal lawmakers.

Loftis speech will take placeat 6:30 p.m. EST this Thursday evening (March 2, 2017) at Zen, The Event Center located at 924 S. Main Street, in downtown Greenville.

Got an eventyoud like us to promote?Email us details ([emailprotected])and well do our best to get it on our calendar.

Banner via iStock

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Anti-Trump movement is nothing like Tea Party – Corpus Christi Caller-Times

Taylor Budowich, The Dallas Morning News 3:03 p.m. CT Feb. 25, 2017

People hold a banner as they take part in a protest march in London, against U.S. President Donald Trump's ban on travellers and immigrants from seven predominantly Muslim countries entering the U.S., Saturday, Feb. 4, 2017. Thousands of protesters have marched on Parliament in London to demand that the British government withdraw its invitation to U.S. President Donald Trump.(Photo: Matt Dunham, AP)

By Taylor Budowich, The Dallas Morning News (TNS)

Left-of-center pundits and activists across the nation are upset about Novembers election results. As they continue grasping for answers, they are mistakenly trying to draw parallels between today's anti-Trump protests and the Tea Party movement in the false hope that political salvation is just around the corner.

When people think of the Tea Party, they often remember the national protests. However, the movement's legacy was not cemented by rallies. Instead, it is being realized through continuous waves of victories at the ballot box.

Most importantly for the conservative activists, those election victories are likely to continue because there is a strong Tea Party presence in the very essence of the conservative, Republican political infrastructure.

The Tea Party's coming-of-age can be traced back to January 2010 in a special election to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy in dark blue Massachusetts.

It was no surprise that the media reported we had no chance, as the state had not elected a Republican senator to that seat in more than 50 years not to mention the fact that 62 percent of the state's voters had just cast ballots in support of Barack Obama. However, the Tea Party shocked both the media and the world by winning handily and sending Scott Brown to Washington.

Through this victory, in which the Tea Party Express played the most significant role in helping to nationalize the election, we were able to prove that support for the Tea Party message was as broad as it was deep.

That victory in Massachusetts proved that conservatives could win anywhere, and that electoral message was carried on to purple states like Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Wisconsin, where each of those senate candidates who won in November of 2010 won again in 2016.

At the gubernatorial level, we've seen the number of conservative chief executives swell to 33, complemented by conservative majorities in 69 of the 99 state legislative bodies. And, except for Tom Corbett in Pennsylvania, every governor elected through the 2010 Tea Party-wave was re-elected in 2014.

The key to the Tea Party support was the inclusiveness of the movement. The only litmus test was a commitment to opposing the increasing size, cost and intrusive of the federal government and supporting fewer taxes and regulatory burdens so the economy could grow and expand opportunities for all Americans.

But unlike the Tea Party, that broad support is not evident in today's anti-Trump protests. Many of these rallies were busy excluding people they disagreed with instead of trying to broaden their base.

An honest look at what's happening today also reveals a significant lack of geographic diversity, which is exactly what propelled the Tea Party.

Statistician Nate Silver, editor-in-chief of FiveThirtyEight and a special correspondent for ABC News, published an in-depth analysis of the anti-Trump Woman's March. In his report, Silver finds that 80 percent of march attendance came in states that Clinton won. By comparison, 58 percent of the Tea Party protests were in states that Obama won in 2008.

RealClearPolitics analyst Sean Trende also explored the Democrats' base problems in a series of articles titled "How Trump Won," by pointing to the party's heavy, yet limited representation in mega-cities, like San Francisco and Los Angeles. Moreover, Trende's piece explored the Democrats' inability to succeed in small towns. Trump won big victories throughout rural and small town America.

The result of those two realities is that even though states like California, New York and Illinois may turn out a lot of anti-Trump protests, those protesters' voices are already being heard and represented by their democratically elected presidential electors, senators and Congress-people.

So, unlike the Tea Party, which proved able to win competitive races, where can this anti-Trump "movement" go?

Five members of Congress have been chosen to serve in Trump's cabinet, and their offices will have to be filled in upcoming elections. There will be openings in Montana, Alabama, Kansas, Georgia, and South Carolina. Does anyone think an anti-Trump candidate will be viable, like Scott Brown was in blue Massachusetts?

Will these protestors dare test just how "populist" their message is by seriously supporting candidates in any of these races? Or will they take a page from Occupy Wall Street and the recent University of California protests and allow their movement to be pre-empted by those seeking violence and destruction instead of rational debate?

My bet is these anti-Trump protesters will go the way of Bernie Sanders and seek political purity rather than political victory. Thus, the Tea Party will continue serving as the most consequential political movement in modern American politics.

Taylor Budowich is the executive director of the Tea Party Express political action committee. He wrote this for The Dallas Morning News.

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Occupy and Tea Party members not that far apart – The Newark Advocate

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12:05 a.m. ET Feb. 25, 2017

Are we really so different?

Im the founding member of the 99% of Newark and East Central Ohio a local Occupy group established in October 2011 and weve had some recent discussion among our members about the overlap between us and those who consider themselves members of the Tea Party.

Looking back to 2009 and 2011, the roots of each are very similar, with much angst directed towards an economy and political system which have failed to work for all of us. In truth, both of these seemingly opposing movements helped give rise to the presidential campaigns of President Trump and Senator Sanders last year.

What is it that appears to divide us? Well, a quick exploration of the facts shows that each side blames a different source for the numerous problems which have tied up our collective progress. With the Tea Party, the blame is placed on government intrusion. As for us Occupiers, we largely accuse the influence of corporations. The common theme in our populist resentment, though, is that our economy is not working for all of us and neither is our political system.

A great deal of our struggle is derived from the pollution of Americas political process in how our campaigns are conducted and covered. If the people can not guarantee representation for our will, then the democratic process in our republic shuts down.

For this reason, our local Occupy group promoted an initiative to create a Democracy Day last fall. While that measure failed by about 1,500 votes, we have decided to host the annual event on our own starting this fall, because the importance of educating the public about what is happening to our political system and why it is helping to cause the economy to malfunction as well is too important to ignore.

Daniel Crawford, Newark

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Occupy and Tea Party members not that far apart - The Newark Advocate