Tea Party movement: Difference between revisions

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A highly visible but recent factor is the '''Tea Party Movement''', initially targeted for anti-tax protests on the U.S. tax day of 15 April 2009; it was named for the [[Boston Tea Party]] in the [[American Revolution]]. Many participants say it is a genuine bottom-up movement, whose members learned from the community organizing of groups on the left, especially citing Web-inspired groups such as [[MoveOn.org]]. It is characterized, however, by opposition and anger more than specific recommendations. Subsequently, it held national protests on 4 July 2009 and 12 September 2009, and its supporters have been visible at both local and national events.
A highly visible but recent factor is the '''Tea Party Movement''', initially targeted for anti-tax protests on the U.S. tax day of 15 April 2009; it was named for the [[Boston Tea Party]] in the [[American Revolution]]. Many participants say it is a genuine bottom-up movement, whose members learned from the community organizing of groups on the left, especially citing Web-inspired groups such as [[MoveOn.org]]. It is characterized, however, by opposition and anger more than specific recommendations. Subsequently, it held national protests on 4 July 2009 and 12 September 2009, and its supporters have been visible at both local and national events.
==Formation==
==Formation==
As mentioned, its first major protest was on 15 July 2009.  
As mentioned, its first major protest was on 15 July 2009, but the movement considers that "Round 2". "Round 1" was a protest on 27 February, resulting from a conference call on 20 February, moderated by [[Michael Patrick Leahy]].<ref name=LeahyBio>{{citation
| publisher = Official Website of Michael Patrick Leahy, The Conservative Radical
| title = Biography
| url =http://www.michaelpatrickleahy.com/biompl.html }}</ref>
 
Three conservative groups have been involved in organizing, "[[FreedomWorks]], the conservative action group led by [[Dick Armey]]; [[dontGO]], a tech savvy free-market action group that sprung out of last August's oil-drilling debate in the House of Representatives; and [[Americans for Prosperity]], an issue advocacy/activist group based on free market principles." All three insist they are assisting a genuine grass-roots movement.<ref name=Atlantic>{{citation
Three conservative groups have been involved in organizing, "[[FreedomWorks]], the conservative action group led by [[Dick Armey]]; [[dontGO]], a tech savvy free-market action group that sprung out of last August's oil-drilling debate in the House of Representatives; and [[Americans for Prosperity]], an issue advocacy/activist group based on free market principles." All three insist they are assisting a genuine grass-roots movement.<ref name=Atlantic>{{citation
  | journal = [[The Atlantic]]
  | journal = [[The Atlantic]]

Revision as of 14:37, 14 December 2009

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A highly visible but recent factor is the Tea Party Movement, initially targeted for anti-tax protests on the U.S. tax day of 15 April 2009; it was named for the Boston Tea Party in the American Revolution. Many participants say it is a genuine bottom-up movement, whose members learned from the community organizing of groups on the left, especially citing Web-inspired groups such as MoveOn.org. It is characterized, however, by opposition and anger more than specific recommendations. Subsequently, it held national protests on 4 July 2009 and 12 September 2009, and its supporters have been visible at both local and national events.

Formation

As mentioned, its first major protest was on 15 July 2009, but the movement considers that "Round 2". "Round 1" was a protest on 27 February, resulting from a conference call on 20 February, moderated by Michael Patrick Leahy.[1]

Three conservative groups have been involved in organizing, "FreedomWorks, the conservative action group led by Dick Armey; dontGO, a tech savvy free-market action group that sprung out of last August's oil-drilling debate in the House of Representatives; and Americans for Prosperity, an issue advocacy/activist group based on free market principles." All three insist they are assisting a genuine grass-roots movement.[2] DontGO did create the original website, http://taxdayteaparty.com/. There is a Tea Party National Advisory Team, associated with a subsequent protest on 4 July 2009, the U.S. national independence day. [3]

Affiliated leadership

While its original focus was on taxes, its scope has broadened, although it continues to be characterized more by protests and anger than an actual platform. Three national figures associated with it are Sarah Palin, Fox News host Glenn Beck, and Rep. Michele Bachmann. CNN contributor John Feehery said while it energizes the Republican base, it also presents problems.

The Tea Party combines the best elements of civic activism with some of the worst elements of fringe extremism...While most Tea Party activists are genuinely concerned about the future of the country, some others see conspiracies around every corner and use unacceptable rhetoric to communicate their displeasure with the president."[4]

Bachmann invoked it against the H.R. 3962 Democratic health care reform legislation. After calling for a protest on Sean Hannity's television show the previous week, saying "she hoped viewers would come to her press conference and then walk through the congressional office buildings, "up and down through the halls, find members of Congress, look at the whites of their eyes and say, 'Don't take away my health care.'" [5] Officially, her 5 November 2009 event, at the U.S. Capitol, was a press conference and not a rally, since there was no demonstration permit; an estimated 5 to 10,000 supporters attended. [6] Appearing with her was House minority leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), U.S. House Minority Whip Eric Cantor, and Republican representatives Todd Akin (R-Missouri ) Steve King (R-Iowa), Paul Broun (R-Georgia), Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio) and Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana).

Criticism on the right

Writing in the conservative National Review, Jim Geraghty questioned the possible irony of "The Tea Party movement in all its myriad forms — free-market groups, little old ladies, crusty in flag hats, fans of Beck’s 9/12 Project — have done everything one could possibly ask to derail a government takeover of the health-care system. It will be a perverse irony if their high-visibility protests end up persuading Democrats to damn the torpedoes in the face of near-certain electoral doom." He suggested that while some Democrats might lose their seats if they vote for the bill, if they fail to do so, they might enrage the Democratic base, with the Republican base already activated, and lose control of the House in the 2010 elections. [7]

References

  1. Biography, Official Website of Michael Patrick Leahy, The Conservative Radical
  2. Chris Good (13 April 2009), "The Tea Party Movement: Who's In Charge?", The Atlantic
  3. The National Leadership Team, National Tea Party Coalition
  4. Ed Hornick (7 December 2009), "Tea Party movement threatened by internal rifts", CNN
  5. Christopher Beam (5 November 2009), "Bachmania: Michele Bachmann invites tea partiers to Washington for another swig.", Slate
  6. Laurie Kellman (5 November 2009), "'Kill the bill' protesters target health care", Associated Press
  7. Jim Geraghty (6 November 2009), "Inverse Reaction: House Democrats may fear the consequences of not passing a bill more than any other.", National Review