Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Left Wing ‘Tea Party’ Growing in Chicago | Chicago Tonight | WTTW – Chicago Tonight | WTTW


Chicago Tonight | WTTW
Left Wing 'Tea Party' Growing in Chicago | Chicago Tonight | WTTW
Chicago Tonight | WTTW
It's being dubbed the tea party of the left. A new movement has bubbled up in Chicago and around the nation in response to the election of Donald Trump.
Arlington Group Borrows Tea Party Tactics to Oppose Trump ...ARL now
Turning Tea Party tactics on Trump: National organizer gives pep ...Morristown Green

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Left Wing 'Tea Party' Growing in Chicago | Chicago Tonight | WTTW - Chicago Tonight | WTTW

C-SPAN to film Tea Party meeting Thursday | News … – Branford News

LAKE CITY The North Central Florida Tea Party will begin meeting again on Thursday with KrisAnne Hall providing a lesson on State Sovereignty.

C-SPAN will also be in attendance to film the presentation for future broadcast.

Hall, a Wellborn resident, created the lesson at the request of a state legislator in Utah after he attended her Roots of Liberty presentation. In her State Sovereignty lesson the origin of the Constitution and the Federal government is explained.

The North Central Florida Tea Party will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Jackie Taylor Building, 128 SW Birley Road, Lake City.

The Tea Party meets on the second Thursday of the month and strives to keep its members up-to-date on the issues facing us in local, state and federal government. For more information, please call Sharon Higgins at 386-688-9402. Find more information on Hall at http://www.krisannehall.com.

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C-SPAN to film Tea Party meeting Thursday | News ... - Branford News

Tom McClintock’s rowdy town hall meeting: Are anti-Trump protesters adopting tea party tactics? – Christian Science Monitor

February 7, 2017 A Republican congressman was escorted by police out of a town hall meeting Saturday after an unruly crowd packed the venue and denounced him for supporting President Trumps policies.

Rep. Tom McClintock (R) represents a solidly red district in northern California. But after backing the presidents controversial policies regarding climate change and immigration, he clashed with hundreds of protesters while holding a town hall meeting a theater in downtown Roseville Saturday. Around 200 people crowded the theater while others gathered outside yelling, Climate change is real! and resist! in protest of Trumps agenda.

As Mr. McClintock listened to constituents concerns in the venue, many booed his responses, which included a call to repeal the Affordable Care Act, a denial of the effects of manmade climate change, and support for Trumps executive immigration order.

"I understand you do not like Donald Trump," McClintock said to the crowd. "I sympathize with you. There have been elections where our side has lost.... Just a word of friendly advice: Remember that there were many people in America who disagreed with and feared Barack Obama just as vigorously as you disagree with and fear Donald Trump."

Without either branch of Congress or the presidency under their control, Democrats have found themselves lacking the legislative means to immediately block Mr. Trumps actions. Instead, those opposing the new presidents agenda have joined together across the country to march, protest at airports and city halls, and organize campaigns to contact their representatives and senators via emails, letters, and phone calls.

Using grass-roots organizing tactics, Democrats have made it clear that they wont let the presidents slew of executive orders or controversial cabinet appointees pass unopposed. For many, the next venue for dissent seems to be the one that brings them closest to their representatives: town halls.

Some have compared the movement on behalf of new political activists to the tea party movement, which rose out of discontent on the political far right for former President Obamas policies. Many of those taking part in the demonstrations around California and the nation are first-time protesters seeking to compel their legislators to stand up to Trumps executive orders and bold personality.

"This is really all about resisting the Trump agenda," Wendy Wood, chairwoman of the local Sierra Nevada chapter ofIndivisible, a political organization that formed following the election, told The Sacramento Bee at the town hall. "Most of us have never participated in political activism of any sort. Something is happening here, and people here are not happy with [Trump] and McClintock. Were here to vote them out."

While protesters at the Saturday town hall were not violent, McClintock said there was an "anarchist element" among the organizers, and was escorted through the crowds to a waiting car by police officers.

He also denied the parallels that have been drawn between the surge of Democratic protesters and the conservative tea partys actions in 2009.

"The tea party engaged people by holding meetings and talking to people and writing letters," McClintock told the Los Angeles Times. "The way to change the course of the country is not to shout people down, not to riot in the streets."

This report contains material from the Associated Press.

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Tom McClintock's rowdy town hall meeting: Are anti-Trump protesters adopting tea party tactics? - Christian Science Monitor

The Left’s Tea Party? – Patriot Post

Culture Beat Feb. 6, 2017

With the all the protesting and rioting across the country since Donald Trumps election, some in the mainstream media have suggested that this is evidence of a leftist grassroots political movement akin to a progressive tea party. While there is little question these protests and riots attract a lot of media attention, is what Americans see occurring an organized grassroots cohesive movement? Not likely.

There is a profound and fundamental difference between the Tea Party movement and the current leftist resistance temper tantrum. The Tea Party was truly a grassroots movement born out of serious concerns over the ballooning national debt, government spending and the need to lower taxes the very ideas of Liberty that lit the fires of the American Revolution. It was mixture of traditional socially minded conservatives and libertarians both concerned over the perceived loss of individual liberty and the growing creep of socialism. It was the passage of ObamaCare that saw the Tea Party come into its own as a truly potent political force that helped lead to the Republican majorities in both the House and Senate with the goal of being reformers, not revolutionaries.

Those on the Left or more accurately far-left currently protesting and rioting arent interested in connecting with traditional American values, though they like to throw around terms like un-American. They see traditional American values as simply codes for racism, bigotry and sexism. To this leftist grievance class everything is about equality or the lack thereof an inequity of outcome, not opportunity. In reality, what the Left is after is a neo-Marxism. When they talk of a grassroots movement, they are speaking of the rise of a new proletariat. They seek a complete re-ordering of society around their leftist concepts of social justice equality. In reality, these protesters are hoping to birth a revolution, not a reformation.

Individual freedom versus collectivism; American history has shown time and again that Americans prefer individual liberty over and against collectivist tyranny. It seems to us there is no comparison between these movements, only contrast.

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The Left's Tea Party? - Patriot Post

Arlington Group Borrows Tea Party Tactics to Oppose Trump … – ARL now

(Updated at 1:58 p.m.) A new grassroots organizationin Arlington hopes to obstruct President Trumps actions by usingsome familiar tactics.

The groupis called Indivisible Arlington, and its quickly becoming a focal point for local political frustrations.The organization gets its name from the Indivisible Guide, an online resource thatborrows protest tacticsfrom the Tea Party, the right-wing protest group that helped reshape the U.S. political landscape after the election of President Obama.

The goal of the Indivisible movementis to act as a kind of Tea Party of the left, said Arlington chapter co-organizer David Robeck.

The Tea Party had very effective ways to obstruct things, he added. We wanted to learn from what they did.

In the months ahead, Indivisible Arlington members will speak up at town hall meetings, call or meet their congressional representatives and show up en masse to events and organized rallies or protests.

The idea seems to be resonating among locals. Though Indivisible Arlington only formed last month, it already has more than400 members.The group is composed of people from all walks of life, including local students, longtime activists and retired federal employees, Robeck said.

So many people showed up to the groups first meeting at the Arlington Central Library last weekend that the meeting had to bemovedto nearby Quincy Park.

Despite the cold weather, 106 people gathered to participate, reads a press release about the groups first meeting. The discussion included a wide range of issues such as cabinet nominees, refugees, and womens rights.

But its not just Arlington thats riding the wave of political activism. Similar protest groups are popping up all across the country.

There was outrage right away and that mobilized people to demonstrate everywhere, Robeck said. Were stronger when we unite together.

Those interested in attending Indivisible Arlington meetings can request access tothe groupsFacebook page.

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Arlington Group Borrows Tea Party Tactics to Oppose Trump ... - ARL now