The Rise Of The “Tea Party Conservatives” And The 2010 Showdown

December 10th, 2009 (22) Posted By Erik Wong.

tea-party-protest

The Washington Post:

The energized “tea party” movement, which upended this year’s political debate with noisy anti-government protests, is preparing to shake up the 2010 elections by channeling money and supporters to conservative candidates set to challenge both Democrats and Republicans.

Buoyed by their success in capsizing a moderate Republican candidate this fall in Upstate New York, tea party activists and affiliated groups are unveiling new political action committees and tactics aimed at capitalizing on conservative opposition to health-care reform, financial bailouts and other Obama administration policies. The goal is to harness the anger that led to hundreds of protests around the country from spring to fall, including a gathering of tens of thousands of protesters on the Mall in September.

The strategy poses both an opportunity and a risk for the beleaguered Republican Party, which is seeking to take advantage of conservative discontent while still fielding candidates who appeal to independent voters. Fundraising efforts are just beginning, but tea party activists have already inspired serious challenges to establishment GOP Senate candidates Carly Fiorina in California and Charlie Crist in Florida; a similar insurgency in last month’s House race in New York splintered local Republicans, leading to a Democratic victory.

“It’s time to take control,” conservative activist Eric Odom declares on the Web site of his new political action committee, Liberty First PAC, which will “support fellow patriots looking [to] defend our liberty.” Odom, who played a central role in organizing the first tea party protests this spring, says the PAC will not support incumbents of either party.

Smart Girl Politics, a conservative women’s group active in getting people to tea party protests, is considering forming a PAC to steer its 23,000 members to help conservative candidates.

Another influential activist, Erick Erickson of RedState.com, plans to encourage donations to conservative challengers such as GOP Senate candidate Pat Toomey, who hopes to win the Pennsylvania seat held by Republican-turned-Democrat Arlen Specter.

And in Washington, FreedomWorks, an advocacy group that helped organize many major tea party protests, is set to announce plans this month to raise millions of dollars through a reorganized PAC targeting its 500,000 registered members, said Matt Kibbe, the group’s president. Chaired by former House majority leader Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.), the group says its fundraising effort will be modeled on the Internet financing juggernaut created by Barack Obama in 2008.

“We’re looking at the potential of raising small checks from a vast number of donors, just as Obama did,” Kibbe said. “We’ve been studying everything about the Obama primary strategy, and I happen to think the tea party movement could make even the Obama grass-roots machine look obsolete.”

Can the movement unite?

But Kibbe and others acknowledge that they are not near that point yet, and political experts in both parties say it is unclear if the movement can become the kind of unified force that can win, and not just disrupt, elections.

The tea party movement is splintered into hundreds of local and state-level groups that have differing rules and goals and for the most part have not participated in big-money politics. Many of the groups have been torn apart by personal feuds in recent months; one major umbrella organization, the Tea Party Patriots, has filed a lawsuit against a founding board member who signed on with a rival, the Tea Party Express.

Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, said during a speech last week that the “tea party movement is savaging the GOP” and has sparked a “corrosive and consistent fight” over the party’s direction.

Conservative activists vehemently disagree and argue that the movement is likely to be reenergized by the expected passage of health-care legislation and a national tea party convention in February featuring former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

“For a long time there was some complacency, but now people are seeing this year what a genuinely big government can do to their economic freedoms,” said Tim Phillips of Americans for Prosperity, a Washington-based group that has organized protests.

The GOP’s internal debate

Publicly, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele and other GOP leaders praise the tea party movement as a crucial component of the party’s base that will help Republicans make substantial gains in 2010. But the push from the right has also worsened infighting over the GOP’s course.

Exhibit A for moderates is the November special election in New York’s 23rd Congressional District, where conservative outsider Doug Hoffman challenged moderate Republican Dede Scozzafava, who dropped out under pressure from Palin, the antitax Club for Growth and other conservatives. But the winner was the Democratic candidate, Bill Owens, who captured a seat that had been in Republican hands for more than a century.

In the wake of that result, Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), the head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said it is important, in selecting candidates, to “temper our conservative approach with pragmatism.”

But many conservative activists see the outcome as a demonstration of the power of grass-roots activism. “Conservatives keep saying that nobody is listening to us, and the way to get people to listen to you is to elect more conservatives,” said Erickson, who advocates boycotting Cornyn’s NRSC and has called “beating the Republican establishment” the top priority for 2010.

A liberal antecedent

Such rhetoric is reminiscent in some ways of that in 2005 and 2006, when liberal groups such as MoveOn.org championed their own candidates in an effort to push Democrats to the left. This year, for example, one group of conservative activists is circulating a resolution that would bar the RNC from endorsing candidates who violate more than three of 10 declared party principles.

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), who has closely allied himself with the tea party movement, has been meeting in recent weeks with prospective conservative candidates seeking help from his leadership PAC, the Senate Conservatives Fund. The PAC, which spent less than $200,000 during the 2008 election cycle, has spent more than $1.2 million this year, including contributing $10,000 to Marco Rubio of Florida, who is running an insurgent Senate primary campaign against Crist.

Many tea party conservatives oppose Crist, the state’s sitting governor, because of his support of Obama’s stimulus plan. Despite the grass-roots backing, however, Rubio has raised only $1.6 million, compared with nearly $7 million raised by Crist.

Another pivotal race is in California, where Fiorina, a multimillionaire former Hewlett-Packard chief executive, is seeking the GOP nomination to challenge third-term Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) in November.

Many tea party activists view Fiorina as too liberal and have fueled an upstart challenge by state Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, who has been active in tea party protests.

DeVore reported $144,000 on hand as of September and acknowledged in an interview that raising money against Fiorina will not be easy. “Most of her money will come from the establishment,” DeVore predicted. “It’s a more difficult challenge than what Hoffman had.”

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  • mike3481

    :beer: :beer:

  • politicalfish

    I hate to be a pessimist, but November 2010 is just under a year away. It will be far too late to stop the ongoing madness that is occurring in DC. Even assuming a change in power in favor of conservatism, there will be no change in the MSM, entertainment industry or educational system. Unfortunately, what is necessary is not only the shift of the balance of power, but a full reversal/elimination of Marxist polity in all these areas. I just don’t see it happening. At best we will affect a slowing of the downward trend.

    • Xparatwoopa

      By God man… your right. If the libtards destroy what little capatlism is left, than the the free market can’t decide that they’re retarded, and blamo no funding. No progressives. No problem. If they distroy the system, retain power, then the hold total control. For your opitmissed side yhis beer is full—–> :beer:

    • cold soldier

      I’m afraid you are 100% correct in your pessimism p.f.

    • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran)

      Goodbye America. :cry: Mabey we will finnaly act when there is nothing left to loose.I hope I live to see a few gallows used well.

    • Blade Runner

      Then don’t be a pessimist, dude. Look at the freakin’ mess the dems in congress are in. There is a lot of in-fighting and those idiots will never get their act together. I think we have time, there are a lot of indications that the number of Americans opposed to this Fascist mob is growing. Independents, who traditionally voted Dem, are making a mass exodus to the right. Hell, Sarah Palin’s approval rating is within 1 point of Obana fana Bo nana, fi fi fo fana. And his rating has fallen below 50% and still falling. By summer, I’ll bet his approval rating will be below what Bush left office with. Conservatism wins every time it is tried. Keep the faith, man. I sure as hell ain’t raising a white flag. Ever.

    • http://www.urbandumpsterdiver.wordpress.com Annie Oakley

      Hey PoliticalFish – I would like to quell your pessimissim.

      I’m actively involved in various tea party groups and 1 group that is heavily involved with helping our military. We’ve adopted 2 families and our members donated $60 the other night to help an unwed Marine Mom who’s due in January.

      I’m also part of the PGR who escorts military families to their loved one’s funeral or a welcome home at the airport. PRG is getting hundreds of local people at these turnouts. It would make you very happy to see the turnout, all ages and races.

      I’m also involved in another movement of young men and women who are tea party patriots, one is ex military. We’ve met in person, strategized, will be hawking our wares at various gun shows and preaching the message.

      Since they’re young enough to be my kids, they’ve kinda embraced me like a Mom thing. I’ve written articles for them and am helping them pull together money and support for local offices to run in in 2010.

      To me the American spirit is alive and well. There are plenty of people in the baby boomer age group that are mad as hell and very informed.

  • Sully

    The WaPo does NOT determine ANYTHING about Conservatism or ‘the tea party movement.
    The “goal” is not to “harness the anger”.

    The goal is to stop the Marxists and get our country back.
    If it doesn’t work through elections in 2010, it becomes the Tar and Feathers Party.
    Or worse.

  • mike3481

    Eric!

    Tell me this doesn’t make you laugh.

    Yeah, I know, but it’s like slowing down to look at a car wreck, except this is funny.

    “Leaked Tiger Woods Mistress Sex Tape”

    http://www.break.com/index/leaked-tiger-woods-mistress-sex-tape.html

    Come on, share it with the Dollardites. :wink:

  • http://patdollard.com Average Joe

    A little off subject but, the new film about Mandella’s soccer team proves:

    THE BLACKS ALWAYS NEED TO WHITES TO BALE THEM OUT, THEN THEY TURN AROUND AND LIE ABOUT IT!!!!!!!!!

    • Sully

      Joe
      Dude
      You put your gorilla mask on when you post right?
      So the SKYNET/.gov facial recognition software planted in your computer can’t recognize you right?
      Dude…. You gotta remember this shit.

  • Xparatwoopa

    No typing skills tonight. Woot Woot

  • killczar

    the most important election of our time is comming on jan. 19 in mass. Scott Brown against coakly. Scott seems like he is a good solid conservative. the problem is he has romney care people guiding him. as reliapundit said we need a tea-party in boston harbor. if we can win this election (fat teds old seat) it could build into something very productive for the future. mass. has more independents than dems. we need nation wide help to defeat coakly. a tea party in boston harbor, fucking A. come on everyone help Scott Brown. it could be the shot heard around the world. Jan. 19. the dims in this state had a terrible turnout for the primary. i will be looking for panthers at voting sites. as they will probably need them to win.

  • bill-tb

    The unstoppable power of leaderless organizations — Read the book the “Starfish and the Spider” … http://www.starfishandspider.com/

    No I don’t have anything to do with the author, just read the book.

    • Bob P

      Great link! That is how a handful of farmers beat the British army. Unfortunately that is how al Qaeda has managed to survive. That gives me a little hope that liberty will never die. :beer:

  • josephus

    Just wait.
    Wait and see what they do to sabotage the election in 2010.
    They are going to pull out all the stops. And this will be like Spanish Civil War — just a Nazi-backed dry run for the bigger event in 2012.
    Guaranteed they are not going to just sit by and let the normal election process deal them out of power.

    • Nanny

      I wouldn’t be so sure of that. 2008 had a lot of college kids caught up in the hopey changey thing. They just voted to be a part of it. They don’t pay attention to mid-terms and with the libtards so down in the polls it will be hard to spend the money to get the govt. educated idiots out of the campuses to vote again. This time around you will get the republicans and idependents out who didn’t vote in 2008 because they were so disgusted by what was offered (specifically McCain – not Palin). This voting block will come out in droves because of the health care, cap and trade, spending, deficits and most of them will be in the 40-60 age range. You will also have the group that now has buyer’s remorse. They will try the ACORN thing but I think most Americans that pay attention will neuter them. Obama showed his hand right off the bat and in turn showed his true colors. Most Americans do not like what they see. I know you might think this is wishful thinking but I think it is fact. I love this country and I am confident that our citizens have seen the light and will do the right thing and be damned anything the libs put in their way to stop them from righting a wrong.

    • saepe expertus

      Nanny,
      Always like your posts. Sound Wisdom. :beer:

  • Clay Barham

    DEBATE WITHOUT ANGER
    We were told never to talk politics or religion, as someone’s going to get angry and throw a punch. It is safer to avoid conflict. Here is another way. Never make a statement of fact. Instead, ask a question so the opponent feels respected, and then listen. They must give predictable answers, putting their position so far out on a limb it falls by its own weight. The only way to do this, however, is to know what you are talking about, what you believe, what to ask and predict. To argue with an elitist who believes life only works when the government designs it, or the elitists few who want to rule the non-elite many, find the roots. If you go toe-to-toe with a know-it-all, without knowing your stuff, you will be embarrassed or trade blows. Know the roots of every argument. Understand what conservatives, libertarians and Marxists believe. It is easier than you think, because the root differences are simple. We may lose the America we’ve known if not mounting a good defense. Go to claysamerica.com and learn the roots of both sides before jousting in politics. You can never lose if you know the roots and debate with confidence.

    • Political.fish

      Debate this :gun: , bitch. :mrgreen:

    • Noway2no

      Ditto! To quote ALWHORE “the debate is over”.

      What constitutes a sound strategy within a corrupt system?

      Pragmatism only works in rational relationships.
      The relationship between patriots and the judicial/political complex is irrational.

      Therefore pragmatism will not work.

  • martdod

    The Sacramento Bee proclaims Tea Party Conservatives to be “Tea Party Radicals.”