Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

No Moral Equivalence Between the Tea Party and the ‘Resistance’ – Breitbart News

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But there is no parallel and no moral equivalence between a nonpartisan grass-roots opposition movement thatwanted to broaden public debate, and a hyper-partisancommunity organizer campaign that rejectsnormal politics, aims to disrupt public debate and stifle free speech.

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As I documented in my bookWacko Birds: The Fall (and Rise) of the Tea Party, the movement had its roots in opposition to President George W. Bushs bailout of Wall Street, emerged in the wake of President Barack Obamas disastrous stimulus, and became a potent political movement in opposition to Obamacare. President Obama had wantedhis health care bill passed by thelate summer of2009, and sent Democraticmembers of Congressto their districts to explain a bill they had not read.

To many Americans, this was the third in a series of major pieces of legislation that was being forced down their throats with no real debate. They arrived at town hall meetings to ask questions and, yes, to protest.

But the real disruption was on the other side, as Democrats organized activists tostifle public opposition. At one town hall in suburban Chicago, for example,left-wing activists conspired to block members of the public from asking questions and were caught red-handed on video.

To the extent there was violence at the town hall meetings, it was almost alwayscarried outagainst Tea Party members.

Meanwhile, the mainstream media vilified the Tea Party, playing up Democrats accusations that it was a racist organization. The worst of many examples of media misinformation was the false accusation that protesters at an anti-Obamacare rally on Capitol Hill had used the N-word against members of the Congressional Black Caucus a claim for which no evidence was ever found.

Since the midterm sweep of 2010, Democrats have been looking for their own Tea Party and the media have been eager to help, doting on the new movements with generous media coverage while covering up their violence and extremist rhetoric.

First there was Occupy Wall Street in 2011, then Black Lives Matter in 2014-16, and now the Resistance a name hinting at theHunger Games and ultimately at theSecond World War, implying that our elected government is a totalitarian regime.

After Rep. Tom McClintock (R-CA) had to leave a town hall last week under police guard, and leftists rioted to stop Breitbart Tech editor Mio Yiannopoulos from speaking at UC Berkeley, Republican politicians, understandably, fear for their safety, as Politicos Rachel Bade reports.

ButBade writes, erroneously: Protesters have disrupted town halls and other public events, jeering and yelling at Republicans just as conservatives did to Democrats when they were writing the law eight years ago.

There is no equivalence whatsoever. The Tea Party showed up at town halls to be heard; the Resistance is showing up to stop people from being heard. Moreover, they are doing so against a background of lies by the Democratic Party, which is sowing fear with defamatory e-mail campaigns warning supporters about a white supremacist presence in the White House, complete with the sort of targeting imagery the media belatedly complained about after the Tucson mass shooting in 2011.

There is a path back to political relevance, and perhaps political power, for the left. It is simple: find policies and messagesthat appeal to the sort of voters who once backed Obama but switched to Donald Trump last November.

Instead, Democrats and their base are feeding each others hysteria, talking about impeachment as the media openly imagine the assassination of the new president.

They are creating justificationsfor violence,whichfalse comparisons to the Tea Party only reinforce.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He was named one of the most influential people in news media in 2016. His new book,How Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

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No Moral Equivalence Between the Tea Party and the 'Resistance' - Breitbart News

Is the Anti-Trump ‘Resistance’ the New Tea Party? – The Atlantic

Bob Bennett didnt think the new president was such a bad guy. To be sure, Bennett, a Republican senator from Utah, had a lot of policy differences with Barack Obama, the Democrat who had just won the 2008 election in a landslide. But just because Bennett was a conservative and the president was a liberal didnt mean they couldnt find common ground, or share an interest in governing the country he believed they both loved. Bennett had always worked across the aisle, and he didnt see why that should change.

He was as surprised as anyone by the uprising that followedand cost him his job. The tea party, a mass movement that hadnt even existed two years earlier, had rallied activists and dealt him a humiliating defeat from within his own party.

Today, a new movementloosely dubbed the resistancehas suddenly arisen in visceral reaction to Donald Trumps election as president, with thousands taking to the streets. For those who remember the tea party, it feels like deja vu.

The parallels are striking: a massive grassroots movement, many of its members new to activism, that feeds primarily off fear and reaction. Misunderstood by the media and both parties, it wreaks havoc on its ostensible allies, even as it reenergizes their moribund political prospects; they can ride the wave, but they cannot control it, and they are often at the mercy of its most unreasonable fringe.

Theres no telling, in these early days, where the anti-Trump resistance will lead. But looking back at the tea party may hold a clue to what lies ahead, for both the president and his opponents. It burned hot and, in a few years, burned out, without leaving much in the way of lasting institutionsbut not before it had reordered Washington and changed the DNA of the political party in its sights.

One of the things the activists were upset at my father about was that he was very visible, and looked very happy, during the inauguration, Bennetts son Jim, who worked on his last campaign, told me this week. There was an innocent explanation for this: As ranking member of the Senate Rules Committee, it was Bennetts job to swear in the vice president. He had endorsed and campaigned for Obamas opponent, John McCain. But my father looked at the peaceful transfer of power as something that transcended party, his son recalled.

The activists said, Why is Senator Bennett up there with Obama looking so happy? Jim Bennett added. He was seen as being complicit.

Obama and the Democrats had won the 2008 election so convincingly that many were convinced the Republican Party was pretty much over. But then something started happening. Scattered local protests sprung up in January 2009, just days after Obama was inaugurated. Then, in February, the CNBC reporter Rick Santellis call for a tea party gave the movement a viral momentand a name.

The new administration had announced an executive action that wouldnt end up affecting very many people, but its critics were convinced it was tantamount to the worst acts of historys repressive regimes.

That is, Santelli believed the Obama administrations new housing policy was going to put America on the inevitable road to collectivism. You know, Cuba used to have mansions and a relatively decent economy, he warned.

Eight days later, coordinated protests unfolded in 40 cities. Many participants told reporters theyd never been politically active before, but they were alarmed by what was happening in Washington and felt they had to speak out. Fox News covered the protests to a degree that sometimes seemed like cheerleadingone of its hosts, Glenn Beck, was particularly enthusiastic. The administration, in response, singled out the network and accused it of abandoning journalistic values.

Longtime conservative players such as the brothers Charles and David Koch sought to lend support to the new grassroots energy, which they believed could advance their pet causes. Many liberals believed the protests were Astroturf: a ginned-up creation of Fox and the Kochs that didnt reflect real grassroots passion. Critics pointed to racist sentiments expressed by some participants as proof the whole movement was extreme. The tea partys self-appointed leaders insisted they were just regular people whod been galvanized, and that their chief concern was conservative positions on issues. In particular, like the original Boston tea partiers, they were against higher taxes. A backronym, TEA Party, was said to stand for Taxed Enough Already.

As mad as they were at Obama, the tea partiers were really mad at Republicans, who claimed to believe the things they did, but seemed to be just letting the president do whatever he wanted. If the president couldnt be stopped, they reasoned, it must be because no one was trying hard enough to stop him. Their ostensible allies were selling them out.

And so they turned on people like Bob Bennett: a conservative but a realist, a career politician who saw the value of compromise, a Republican who believed working with Democrats was the way to get things done. Bennetts approval rating suddenly tanked in his home state. Throughout his career, hed been rated one of the Senates most conservative members, but now his opponents argued he wasnt conservative enough. One of several tea partiers challenging him was a political newcomer named Mike Lee who called himself a constitutional conservative.

No senator in Utahs history had ever failed to advance to the general election. But at the Utah Republican convention in May 2010, Bennett failed to get the 60 percent of delegates he needed to win renomination on the first ballot. In the second round, he finished third. Lee won the nomination, and is still a senator today.

The defeat of a sitting senator by his own party was an astonishing feat. It would repeat itself later that year in Alaska, where Lisa Murkowski lost the GOP primary to another no-name political novice. (She later won the general election as a write-in candidate.) Candidates bearing the tea party mantle defeated establishment politicians in open primaries across the country for House, Senate, and governor, championed by talk radio and blogs like RedState. To survive, sitting Republican officeholders scrambled to prove their tea party bona fides.

For the Obama administration, meanwhile, this was all very puzzling. As a Democratic senator, Obama had gotten along with Republican colleagues like Bennett and Indianas Richard Lugar (who would be defeated by a tea party primary challenger in 2012). Obama thought of himself as a bridge-builder, and he figured Republicans would continue to support policies theyd advocated in the pastthe market-based approach to universal health care championed by the Republican governor of Massachusetts; the cap-and-trade plan to address climate change that Republicans had supported; infrastructure spending that liberal and conservative economists believed was needed to stimulate the economy. But Republicans near-total resistance meant Obama could only rely on members of his own party, and couldnt get much done at all once his party no longer had 60 seats in the Senate.

The mainstream media covered this fight as largely ideological: The Republican Party was moving to the right; conservatives were looking to purge moderates from their ranks; anti-incumbent rage was in the air. The roots of the tea party were said to extend back before Obama was elected, to conservatives anger at the Bush administrations bipartisan bank bailouts, or to the libertarian followers of former Representative Ron Paul.

People like Glenn Beck, Mike Lee, and Ron Pauls son Rand, who defeated an establishment-backed incumbent to win a Senate seat in 2012, did believe in a conservative ideology of small government and lower taxes. But it was Obamas election that had brought the masses out into the streets. And they were willing to believe almost anything that confirmed their worst fears about the president: He was a secret Muslim, not born in the U.S., whose fist-bump of greeting was a secret terrorist signal. The rumors raced around online, impervious to debunking.

Its too soon to tell if the current resistance movement will follow the tea partys pattern. But there are already many parallels. It has arisen spontaneously and en masse. Many Republicans believe its not real: The protests, they tell me, are Astroturf funded by George Soros; the opposition to Betsy DeVos as education secretary, which jammed Senate switchboards, was merely manufactured by the teachers unions. But the unions and Soros didnt start this fire any more than the Kochs started the tea partytheyre merely riding the wave in hopes it will advance their goals.

Second, Trumps election appears to have galvanized a lot of people who weren't previously Democratic activists or politically minded at all. They may have voted Democrat, they may consider themselves progressive, but theyre not the Democratic base that donated to politicians and knocked on doors in years past. Commentators on the right have seized on the violent sentiments expressed by some participants as proof the whole movement is composed of frightening extremists.

Third, while Trumps Cabinet, executive actions, and Supreme Court nominee are sharply and traditionally right-wing, he has an agenda his team believes is truly cross-partisan. Senior White House officials say he is serious about pursuing policies Democrats have supported in the past, like negotiating Medicare prescription-drug prices, a big-spending infrastructure bill, and a more protectionist trade policy. Trumps team sincerely believes at least some Democrats will put governing above partisanship and go along with these initiatives.

But the movement is already urging Democrats to massively resist, and they are listening. Viral rumors that flatter peoples worst assumptionsthat Russia hacked the voting machines, that Trump is invading Mexico, that a picture was doctored to make his hands look biggercatch fire with a credulous audience before they can be debunked (and persist long afterward). Nancy Pelosi and Bernie Sanders, previously considered pretty left-wing, have been attacked for suggesting they could work with Trump. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer drew left-wing protesters at his offices in Brooklyn. When Delaware Senator Tom Carper hugged Trumps attorney general nominee, Jeff Sessions, after voting against him, anti-Trumpers demanded a primary challenge.

The surge of energy from the tea party terrorized Republicans, but it also boosted them. Brian Walsh, a Republican Senate campaign staffer at the time, recalled welcoming the sudden burst of passion. When the tea party first started, I thought it was great, he told me this week. We had just lost the White House and a lot of Senate races. It was great to see the grassroots fired up.

Tea party primaries were a headache for Walshs committee, but when the party did well in the midterms, the primary challenges seemed a small price to pay. I actually thought on balance the tea party movement was a net positive for us, Walsh said. Though I think, ultimately, it led to Trump. (Now a partner in a D.C. consulting firm, Walsh opposed Trump in 2016, in part because the now-president had stiffed his father in a business deal.)

In early 2009, experts predicted Democrats would gain even more Senate seats in 2010 and could not possibly lose the House; Republicans won seven Senate seats and took the House in a wave. Pundits kept saying the tea party pushing the GOP to the right would hurt its electoral prospects, but the party gained throughout Obamas presidency, with the notable exception of the presidential election.

Meanwhile, some liberals perpetually tried to start a parallel left-wing tea party movement to purge the Democratic Party of compromisers, but they mostly lost Democratic primaries. Without a president in office who scared the living crap out of rank-and-file voters, the ideologues never had the numbers to prevail.

In retrospect, no one understood what really made tea party voters tick better than Donald Trump. He didnt embrace conservative positions, but as a doubter of the presidents legitimacy, he had no peer, spouting birtherism long after reporters had investigated and debunked it. Conservatives like Mike Lee, Rand Paul, and Glenn Beck watched in horror as he made a mockery of their principlesbut the base ate it up. And despite the GOP establishmentsand mainstream medias, and Hillary Clinton campaignscertainty that general-election voters would reject Trump and punish the GOP, the party swept to unprecedented power at all levels.

As for Bob Bennett, he didnt live to see the last chapter. He died in May of 2016. On his deathbed, in the hospital, he turned to his wife and son.

He asked, Are there any Muslims in this hospital? We thought it might have been confusion from the stroke, Jim Bennett recalled. And then he said, Id like to go up to every one of them and apologize on behalf of the Republican Party for Donald Trump.

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Is the Anti-Trump 'Resistance' the New Tea Party? - The Atlantic

The Tea Party of Gilmer Party invites you to come its meeting Monday February 13th – Fetchyournews.com

The Tea Party of Gilmer Party invites you to come its meeting Monday February 13th Announcements February 8, 2017 , by Paid Advertisement

Your Monthly News & Updates

Meet and Greet with Refreshments at 6:30 PM

Meeting starts at 7:00 PM

The theme of this meeting will be The future Direction and actions of the Tea Parties and we are asking for your input as it is YOUR Tea Party.

Were Back

If this is the first newsletter you have received since about Christmas it is because several of our recent Newsletters have had the ETC/Ellijay addresses blocked by a NY server used for ETC E-Mail accounts. Constant Contact, ETC and the Tea Party of Gilmer county have spent the last month working on this problem and we now believe our Newsletters are back to normal.

From its inception the Tea Party goal has been to sound the alarm and provide solid information about what was going on in our Country which was contrary to the Constitution.

The various Tea Parties including our own did a good job in providing information but that is now in the past as our side won and elected a President who is trying to do something about the problems we shouted from the rooftops for the last eight years but the battle is only half won.

In order to realize the rewards of the last election to stop run away taxes and regulations and to enforce our laws about illegal migration the Tea Parties need to get behind President Trump by contacting our elected officials and urging them to show a little spine and act like winners and get it done by what ever legal means necessary.

A Few Cases In Point

Confirm Trumps nominations today using the nuclear option as Harry Reid and the Democrats have shown they will use whatever works while the Republicans continue to play nice so the Left wing media wont say mean things about them.

Betty DeVos is yet to be confirmed as Secretary of Education and has in fact two Republicans who received huge contributions from the teachers Union intending to vote against her.

VP Pence will be the tie breaker but both Sen Collins and Sen Murkowski should be stripped of any leadership or committee positions today.

Executive Orders

The last six Presidents have used executive orders to limit immigration but when Trump does the same thing with a ninety day temporary order an activist district Judge (A position created by Congress) is telling the American people he alone has the power to over turn our national sovereignty and the laws passed by congress.

To save you some time on Google I will quote Section 212F of the Immigration and Nationality act of 1952 Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, he MAY BY PROCLAMATION ,and for such period as he may deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants or non-immigrants, or impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.

When the TPGC wanted to speak from the Old Courthouse steps back in 2009 we asked for and received a permit from the city of Ellijay. We had no riots and no trash left behind

I am going to post a list of phone number for you to load on your phone in order to call your elected officials and let them know what you expect from them in they like their job.

Senator Isakson

202-224-3643

Senator Perdue

202-224-3521

RepresentativeCollins

202-225-9893

State Senator Steve Gooch

Ga House Speaker Ralston

Representative Doug Collins

404-656-1776

News Sources

fyntv.com

fetchyournews.com

patriotpost.com

If you have ideas for our meetings, please contact me at the email address below.

Frank Oglesby, Chairman

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The Tea Party of Gilmer Party invites you to come its meeting Monday February 13th - Fetchyournews.com

Progressive Groups Aim To Resist Trump Policies With Tea Party Tactics – KPBS

Aired 2/8/17 on KPBS News.

San Diego organizers gathered in front of the offices of U.S. senators and members of congress to lay out a progressive alternative to the Trump policies they oppose.

A collection of progressive groups continue to converge on the San Diego offices of federal lawmakers. The groups are part of a loosely-coordinated national movement which sprang up after President Trump took office.

Roughly 200 people gathered Tuesday in front of the San Diego offices of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein. Theyve been there every Tuesday since the inauguration. This Tuesday they wanted lawmakers to vote against Sen. Jeff Sessions for attorney general and Trumps pick for the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Judge Neil Gorsuch. Its part of a grassroots effort to force lawmakers to push back against the Trump administration the way the Tea Party pushed Republican lawmakers to the right eight years ago.

We definitely saw the GOP run a really strong campaign around not allowing everything to pass, said Jabez Lebret of Together We Will San Diego. They really put up a wall between Obama and his administration. We want to put up a wall between number 45 and his administration on some of the actions they are taking.

Together We Will is one of several progressive groups which sprung up, coming out of protests like the Womens March on Washington. Theyre under the loose umbrella of Indivisible, from the Indivisible Guide, an organizing handbook created by a group of former Congressional staffers.

Calling it Resist Trump Tuesday protesters gave a staffer at Feinsteins office a copy of that days agenda. A week earlier organizers said they promised to bring cookies, so the note came with a bag of chocolate chips. The group also appeared at the offices of U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris, along with Congressmen Duncan Hunter and Darrell Issa.

In 2010, Republicans were able to end the Democratic majority in the House and their super majority in the Senate.

The idea behind Indivisible, Lebret said, is to keep coming every week, with an eye toward allowing progressives to make similar gains in the midterm elections in 2018.

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Progressive Groups Aim To Resist Trump Policies With Tea Party Tactics - KPBS

‘Women in His Grill’: Is Tea Party Congressman Brat the Biggest Chicken in the House? – AlterNet

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons / United States Congress

Congressman Dave Brathas faced a lot of criticism in the past weeks in Virginias 7th District. He faced even more when he came into the national spotlight about a week agoand for good reason.After refusing to host Town Hall meetings for his constituents in Virginias 7th District until 100 days into the Trump presidency, thesecond-term Congressman (who affiliates with the Tea Party) was recorded saying some not-so-flattering things about the women at what can only be described as astand-up comedy routine with a bit of policy talk thrown in for good measure.

While the second-term Congressman said a lot of things that rubbed many of his constituents the wrong way, one statement was particularly notable. Early into his speaking engagementwhich, by the way, was given in Virginias 1st District on January 28, while he is stillrefusing to host a similar event in his own DistrictDave Brat hinted at why he wasnt open to talking to his own constituents despite heading to Arizona to speak at a Town Meeting there later this month.

Since Obamacare and these issues have come up, the women are in my grill wherever I go, Brat said to a room full of Republican supporters in Virginias 1st District. They come up and they ask me whens your next town hall? andbelieve meits not to give positive input. The statement was met with a hearty round of laughter from the crowd as Brat chuckled at his own hilarious disregard for the concerns of the people he was elected to represent.

One such womanwho is most certainly in his grillis Maureen Hains, a 33-year-old resident of Midlothian, Virginia and the founder of the7th District Town Hall MeetingFacebook Group (which has over 1,000 members at this time). In fact, it might just be Hains and her friends who Brat was referring to in hisinsensitive and misogynistic speech. See, as Brat became more and more evasive regarding his constituents requests for a Town Hall meeting regarding the Obamacare repeal, Hains decided shecould no longer take it. Although shesays shes never had a background in local politics, Hains decided she had todo something aftergetting the runaroundfrom Rep. Brats office.

And what was she calling them aboutabout? The date and time of the next Town Hall meeting hosted by the Congressman who she voted for.

Yes, thats right. Despite painting the women as the enemy of reason and conservative values in his bizarroDef Comedy Jam-style speech to a room of mostly male supporters, it turns out that at least some of thewomen hes referring to actually did vote for him, which would indicate that they at least agree with some of what he wants to do.

That hasnt stopped Brat from painting Maureen and the rest of his discontented constituents as rich liberals and paid activists as an excuse todismiss their concerns without a second thought. Hains isnt upset about the policies necessarily (though she doesfeel uneasyabout the promise to destroy theJohnson Amendmentamong a few others), its Brats apparent contempt for the people he represents that got her fired up and ready to fight.

The aforementioned video didnt help his case, of course. Maureen explained that she wasabhorred he would refer to hisconstituentsas the Women.' She said that it reminded [her]of Donald Trumpsrhetoricwith theMexicans and the Blacks. [Brat]doesnt realize that its not just women who want to be heard. But that wasnt the biggest problem. She founded the group before Brats speech had even happened.

While Hains said she found the Congressmans comments condescending and sexist, she explained that her concerns do not lie only with what he may or may not planto do. Imconcerned hes changed. Im concerned hes become a sell out. Im concerned that he is lying when he says he wants peoples voices to be heard. Im concerned he doesnt care how his actions in the first 100 days will affect his constituents, she explained.

And thats an important distinction to make. Just because you demand transparency from your representatives does not mean that you are opposing them or out to criticizewhich seems to be what Brat doesnt understand (that said, Dave Brat, I, personally, oppose everything you are doing, just FYI). The women who are up in hisgrill arent out to get him. Its not a witch hunt. Its not an attempt to demonize himor hissupporters. They want to do their civic duty and make their voices heard.

His defensive argument that hes held so many town hall meetings in the past doesnt answer our question. Were not asking if hes done them before, we know he has, we are simply asking, When is the next Town Hall meeting? Its not an accusation, its a question. We still have not heard the answer, Hains explained of her position. You cant represent if you wont listen to both sides.

That seems pretty reasonable to me, Congressman. Seriously, if you cant wrap your head around that, get out of politics and make way for someone who actually cares about the will of the people.

Thelast few weeks have been fatiguing to say the least, but Maureen Hains story does speak to one important silver liningto the current political situation: the apathy that has marked American politics for far too long seems to be coming to an end. People all over the country who have never participated inthe political process (outside of voting) are getting involvedwhich actually bodes well for the future of our country.

Although things are admittedly bleak in Washington at the moment, the renewed interest in defending our rights as citizensfrom marriage equality and healthcare to church/state separation and access to our representatives indicates that, ifwe make it through the next few years (months? days? weeks?), we will be in a better place than we ever have beenand this time, it seems, women are leading the fight.

So, getused to us being in your grill, Congressman. The women arentgoing anywhere Except maybe to Washington to take your job.

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'Women in His Grill': Is Tea Party Congressman Brat the Biggest Chicken in the House? - AlterNet