UN Agenda 21
implementation in the US, excessive immigration, excessive unnecessary
job-killing regulations and trade agreements, economy crushing federal spending
and debt, excessive money printing creating a 450% increase in the money supply
and its consequences, excessive government liabilities, government to
government foreign aid, erosion of voter control and property rights,
governments’ failure to comply with the US Constitution, Bill of Rights and
Founding Documents, unconstitutional federal departments, agencies and
programs.
We are opposed to the
American Communist Party and its infiltration into the Democrat Party. We
support quitting the UN as “payback” for its global warming hoax and other
power grabs.
We have well over 100
active Tea Party type groups in Georgia that intervene on city, county and
state issues as they occur, usually in coalition with other groups. In 2012, we defeated the T-SPLOST in 9 of 12
regions. This past year we fought Common
Core and lobbied to repeal regionalism and nullify Obamacare and proposed EPA
regulations, but the Gold Dome is full of RINOs, not Tea Partiers. Norb Leahy
The following Wikipedia
Tea Party Movement article gives a reasonably accurate history.
This article is about the political movement. For the protest events
themselves, see Tea Party protests. For the
U.S. Congressional caucus, see Tea Party Caucus.
Tea Party
protesters were on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol and the National Mall at the Taxpayer March on Washington on September 12, 2009.
The Tea Party movement is an American
political movement known for its conservative positions and its role in the Republican Party. Members of the movement have called
for a reduction of the U.S. national debt and federal budget deficit by reducing government spending. In addition, they have also called
for lowering taxes. The movement opposes government-sponsored universal
healthcare and has been described as a mixture of libertarian, populist, and conservative activists. It has sponsored multiple
protests and supported various political candidates since 2009. Various polls have found
that slightly over 10% of Americans identify as members.
The movement
began following Barack Obama's first presidential inauguration (in January
2009) when his
administration announced plans to give financial aid to bankrupt homeowners. Following calls by Rick Santelli for a "tea party" by Chicago
bond-dealers conservative groups coalesced around the idea of protesting
against Obama's agenda and a series of protests took place, including the 2009 Taxpayer March on Washington. Supporters of the movement
subsequently had a major impact on the internal politics of the Republican
Party.
The movement's
name refers to the Boston Tea Party of December 16, 1773, a turning-point
in the American struggle for independence from Great Britain. The original Tea
Party protesters demonstrated against taxation by the British without political
representation for the American colonists, and references to the Boston Tea
Party occurred in Tax Day protests held in the 1990s and before.
Agenda
The Tea Party does not have a single
uniform agenda. The decentralized character of the Tea Party, with its lack of
formal structure or hierarchy, allows each autonomous group to set its own
priorities and goals. Goals may conflict, and priorities will often differ between
groups. Many Tea Party organizers see this as a strength rather than a
weakness, as decentralization has helped to immunize the Tea Party against
co-opting by outside entities and corruption from within.
The Tea Party has generally sought to
avoid placing too much emphasis on traditional conservative social issues.
National Tea Party organizations, such as the Tea Party Patriots and FreedomWorks, have expressed
concern that engaging in social issues would be divisive. Instead, they have
sought to have activists focus their efforts away from social issues and focus
on economic and limited government issues Still, many groups like Glenn Beck's 9/12 Tea
Parties, TeaParty.org, the Iowa Tea Party and Delaware Patriot Organizations do
act on social issues such as abortion, gun control, prayer in schools, and illegal immigration.
The Tea Party generally focuses on a
significant reduction in the size and scope of the government. Tea Party
members generally advocate a national economy operating without government
oversight. Among its goals are limiting the size of the federal government,
reducing government spending, lowering the national debt and opposing tax
increases. To this end, Tea Party groups have protested the Troubled Asset
Relief Program (TARP), stimulus programs such as the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA, commonly
referred to as the Stimulus or The Recovery Act), cap and trade, health care
reform such as the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA, also known
simply as the Affordable Care Act or "Obamacare") and
perceived attacks by the federal government on their 1st, 2nd, 4th and 10th
Amendment rights.[27] Tea Party groups
have also voiced support for right to work legislation as
well as tighter border security, and opposed amnesty for illegal immigrants. On
the federal health care reform law, they began to work at the state level to
nullify the law, after the Republican Party lost seats
in congress and the Presidency in the 2012 elections. It has
also mobilized locally against the United Nations Agenda
21 They have protested the IRS for controversial treatment of groups with
"tea party" in their names. They have formed Super PACs to support
candidates sympathetic to their goals and have opposed what they call the
"Republican establishment" candidates.
Even though the groups have a wide
range of different goals, the Tea Party places its view of the Constitution at
the center of its reform agenda. It urges the return of government as intended
by some of the Founding Fathers. It also
seeks to teach its view of the Constitution and other founding documents. Scholars have
described its interpretation variously as originalist, popular, or a
unique combination of the two. Reliance on the Constitution is selective and
inconsistent. Adherents cite it, yet do so more as a cultural reference rather
than out of commitment to the text, which they seek to alter. Several
constitutional amendments have been targeted by some in the movement for full
or partial repeal, including the 14th, 16th, and 17th. There has
also been support for a proposed Repeal Amendment, which would
enable a two-thirds majority of the states to repeal federal laws, and a Balanced Budget
Amendment, to limit deficit spending.
One attempt at forming a list of what
Tea Partiers wanted Congress to do resulted in the Contract from America. It was a
legislative agenda created by conservative activist Ryan Hecker with the
assistance of Dick Armey of FreedomWorks.
Armey had co-written the previous Contract with
America released by the Republican Party during the 1994 midterm
elections. One thousand agenda ideas that had been submitted were narrowed down
to twenty-one non-social issues. Participants then voted in an online campaign
in which they were asked to select their favorite policy planks. The results
were released as a ten-point Tea Party platform. The Contract from America was
met with some support within the Republican Party, but it was not broadly
embraced by GOP leadership, which released its own 'Pledge to America'
In the aftermath of the 2012 American
elections, some Tea Party activists have taken up more
traditionally populist ideological viewpoints on issues that are distinct from
general conservative views. Examples are various Tea Party demonstrators
sometimes coming out in favor of U.S. immigration reform as well as
for raising the U.S. minimum
wage.
Foreign policy of the United States
Historian and writer Walter Russell Mead analyzes
the foreign policy views of the Tea Party movement in a 2011 essay published in
Foreign Affairs. Mead says
that Jacksonian populists,
such as the Tea Party, combine a belief in American
exceptionalism and its role in the world with skepticism of American's
"ability to create a liberal world order". When necessary, they favor
'total
war' and unconditional surrender over "limited wars for
limited goals". Mead identifies two main trends, one somewhat personified
by Paul and the other by Palin. "Paulites" have a Jeffersonian approach
that seeks to avoid foreign military involvement. "Palinites", while
seeking to avoid being drawn into unnecessary conflicts, favor a more
aggressive response to maintaining America's primacy in international
relations. Mead says that both groups share a distaste for "liberal
internationalism".
Some Tea Party affiliated Republicans,
such as Michele Bachmann, Jeff Duncan, Connie Mack IV, Jeff Flake, Tim Scott, Joe Walsh, Allen West, and Jason Chaffetz, voted for progressive
Congressman Dennis Kucinich's resolution to
withdraw U.S. military personnel from Libya. In the
Senate, three Tea Party backed Republicans, Jim DeMint, Mike Lee and Michael Crapo, voted to limit
foreign aid to Libya, Pakistan and Egypt. Tea Partiers in both houses of
Congress have shown willingness to cut foreign aid. Most leading figures within
the Tea Party both within and outside Congress opposed military intervention in
Syria.
Organization
The Tea Party movement is composed of
a loose affiliation of national and local groups that determine their own
platforms and agendas without central leadership. The Tea Party movement has
been cited as an example of grassroots political
activity, although it has also been described as an example of corporate-funded
activity made to appear as spontaneous community action, a practice known as astroturfing. Other
observers see the organization as having its grassroots element "amplified
by the right-wing media", supported by elite funding.
The Tea Party movement is not a
national political party; polls show that most Tea Partiers consider themselves
to be Republicans and the movement's supporters have tended to endorse
Republican candidates Commentators, including Gallup editor-in-chief Frank
Newport, have suggested that the movement is not a new political group but
simply a re-branding of traditional Republican candidates and policies. An
October 2010 Washington Post canvass of
local Tea Party organizers found 87% saying "dissatisfaction with mainstream
Republican Party leaders" was "an important factor in the support the
group has received so far".
The Tea Party movement's membership
includes Republican
politicians Sarah Palin, Dick Armey, Michele Bachmann, Marco Rubio, and Ted
Cruz] In July 2010, Bachmann formed the Tea Party Congressional Caucus; however,
the caucus has been defunct since July 2012. An article in Politico reported
that many Tea Party activists were skeptical of the caucus, seeing it as an
effort by the Republican Party to hijack
the movement. Utah congressman Jason Chaffetz refused to join
the caucus, saying
Structure and formality are the exact
opposite of what the Tea Party is, and if there is an attempt to put structure
and formality around it, or to co-opt it by Washington, D.C., it’s going to
take away from the free-flowing nature of the true Tea Party movement.
Journalist Joshua Green has stated
in The Atlantic that while
Ron
Paul is not the Tea Party's founder, or its culturally
resonant figure, he has become the "intellectual godfather" of the
movement since many now agree with his long-held beliefs.
Etymology
The name "Tea Party" is a
reference to the Boston Tea Party, a protest in 1773
by colonists who objected to British taxation without representation, and
demonstrated by dumping British tea taken from docked ships into the harbor.
Some commentators have referred to the Tea
in "Tea Party" as the backronym
"Taxed Enough Already", though this did not appear until months after
the first nationwide protests.
History See also: Tax revolt, List of Tea Party protests, 2009 and List of Tea Party protests, 2010
Background
References to the Boston Tea Party
were part of Tax
Day protests held in the 1990s and before.[17][18][19][20] In 1984, David H. Koch and Charles G. Koch of Koch Industries founded Citizens for a
Sound Economy (CSE), a conservative political group whose
self-described mission was "to fight for less government, lower taxes, and
less regulation." Congressman Ron
Paul was appointed as the first chairman of the organization.
The CSE lobbied for policies favorable to corporations, particularly tobacco
companies
In 2002, a Tea Party movement website
was designed and published by the CSE at web address www.usteaparty.com, and stated "our US Tea Party is a
national event, hosted continuously online and open to all Americans who feel our
taxes are too high and the tax code is too complicated." The site did not
take off at the time. In 2003, Dick Armey became the
chairman of CSE after retiring from Congress. In 2004, Citizens for a Sound
Economy split into FreedomWorks, for 501c4
advocacy activity, and the Americans for
Prosperity Foundation. Dick Armey stayed as chairman of
FreedomWorks, while David Koch stayed as Chairman of the Americans for
Prosperity Foundation. The two organizations would become key players in the
Tea Party movement from 2009 onward. Americans for Prosperity and FreedomWorks
were "probably the leading partners" in the September, 2009 Taxpayer
March on Washington, also known as the "9/12 Tea Party," according to
The Guardian.
Commentaries on origin
Fox News Channel commentator Juan Williams has said that the
Tea Party movement emerged from the "ashes" of Ron Paul's 2008
presidential primary campaign. Indeed, Ron Paul has stated that its origin was,
on December 16, 2007, when supporters held a 24 hour record breaking, "moneybomb"
fundraising event on the Boston Tea Party's 234th
anniversary, but that others, including Republicans, took over and changed some
of the movement's core beliefs. Writing for Slate.com, Dave Weigel has argued in
concurrence that, in his view, the "first modern Tea Party events occurred
in December 2007, long before Barack Obama took office, and they were organized
by supporters of Rep. Ron Paul," with the movement expanding and gaining
prominence in 2009. Barack Obama, the first African American President of the
United States, took office in January, 2009.
Journalist Jane Mayer has said that the Koch brothers were essential in
funding and strengthening the movement, through groups such as Americans for
Prosperity. In 2013, a study published in the journal Tobacco Control concluded that
organizations within the movement were connected with non-profit organizations
that the tobacco industry and other corporate interests worked with and
provided funding for, including the group Citizens for a
Sound Economy. Al
Gore cited the study and said that the connections between
"market fundamentalists", the tobacco industry and the Tea Party
could be traced to a 1971 memo from tobacco lawyer Lewis F. Powell, Jr. who
advocated more political power for corporations. Gore said that the Tea Party
is an extension of this political strategy "to promote corporate profit at
the expense of the public good."
Former governor of Alaska and vice
presidential candidate Sarah Palin, keynoted a Tea
Party Tax Day protest at the state capital in Madison, Wisconsin on April
15, 2011, reflected on the origins of the Tea Party movement and credited
President Barack Obama, saying "And
speaking of President Obama, I think we ought to pay tribute to him today at
this Tax Day Tea Party because really he’s the inspiration for why we’re here
today. That’s right. The Tea Party Movement wouldn’t exist without Barack
Obama."
Early local protest events
Members of Hoosiers for Fair Taxation stage one of the
country's first local Tea Party protests against mayor Bart Peterson
on July 28, 2007 by putting their tax assessments in an oversize tea bag and
dunking it into the Broad Ripple Canal. The Sam Adams Alliance awarded organizer Melyssa Hubbard (née Donaghy) the first annual tea party
prize for staging these protests.
In September 2005, Birmingham, Al talk
show hosts Russ and Dee Fine led a large scale "Tea Party" protest
against illegal immigration in Birmingham, AL. On January 24, 2009, Trevor
Leach, chairman of the Young Americans
for Liberty in New York State organized a "Tea Party" to
protest obesity
taxes proposed by New York Governor David Paterson and call for
fiscal responsibility on the part of the government. Several of the protesters
wore Native American headdresses similar to the band of 18th century colonists
who dumped tea in Boston Harbor to express outrage about British taxes.
Some of the protests were partially in
response to several federal laws: the Bush administration's Emergency
Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, and the Obama
administration's economic stimulus package the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and healthcare
reform legislation. The bailouts of banks by the Bush and Obama
administrations triggered the Tea Party's rise, according to political analyst Scott Rasmussen. Tea party
participants "think federal spending, deficits and taxes are too high, and
they think no one in Washington is listening to them, and that latter point is
really, really important," Rasmussen said.
New York Times journalist
Kate Zernike reported that
leaders within the Tea Party credit Seattle blogger
and conservative activist Keli Carender with organizing
the first Tea Party in February 2009, although the term "Tea Party"
was not used.[99] Other articles,
written by Chris Good of The Atlantic and NPR's Martin
Kaste, credit Carender as "one of the first" Tea Party organizers and
state that she "organized some of the earliest Tea Party-style
protests".
Carender first organized what she
called a "Porkulus Protest" in Seattle on Presidents Day, February
16, the day before President Barack Obama signed the stimulus
bill into law. Carender said she did it without support from
outside groups or city officials. "I just got fed up and planned it."
Carender said 120 people participated. "Which is amazing for the bluest of blue
cities I live in, and on only four days notice! This was due to me spending the
entire four days calling and emailing every person, think tank, policy center,
university professors (that were sympathetic), etc. in town, and not stopping
until the day came."
Contacted by Carender, Steve Beren promoted the event
on his blog four days before the protest and agreed to be a speaker at the
rally. Carender also contacted conservative author and
Fox News Channel contributor Michelle Malkin, and asked her to
publicize the rally on her blog, which Malkin did the day before the event. The
following day, the Colorado branch of Americans for
Prosperity held a protest at the Colorado Capitol,
also promoted by Malkin. Carender held a second protest on February 27, 2009,
reporting "We more than doubled our attendance at this one."
First national protests
On February 18, 2009, the one-month old Obama administration announced the Homeowners Affordability and Stability Plan, an economic recovery plan to help home owners avoid foreclosure by refinance mortgages in the wake of the Great Recession. The next day, CNBC business news editor Rick Santelli criticized the Plan in a live broadcast from the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. He said that those plans were "promoting bad behavior" by "subsidizing losers' mortgages". He suggested holding a tea party for traders to gather and dump the derivatives in the Chicago River on July 1. “President Obama, are you listening?” he asked. A number of the floor traders around him cheered on his proposal, to the amusement of the hosts in the studio. Santelli's "rant" became a viral video after being featured on the Drudge Report.
According to The New Yorker writer Ben
McGrath and New York Times
reporter Kate Zernike, this is where the movement was first inspired to
coalesce under the collective banner of "Tea Party." Santelli's
remarks "set the fuse to the modern anti-Obama Tea Party movement,"
according to journalist Lee
Fang. About 10 hours after Santelli's remarks, reTeaParty.com
was bought to coordinate Tea Parties scheduled for Independence Day and, as of
March 4, was reported to be receiving 11,000 visitors a day. Within hours, the
conservative political
advocacy group Americans for
Prosperity registered the domain name "TaxDayTeaParty.com,"
and launched a website calling for protests against Obama. Overnight, websites
such as
"ChicagoTeaParty.com"
(registered in August 2008 by Chicagoan Zack Christenson, radio producer for
conservative talk show host Milt Rosenberg) were live within
12 hours. By the next day, guests on Fox News had already begun to mention this
new "Tea Party." As reported by The
Huffington Post, a Facebook page was
developed on February 20 calling for Tea Party protests across the country.
A "Nationwide Chicago Tea
Party" protest was coordinated across over 40 different cities for
February 27, 2009, thus establishing the first national modern Tea Party
protest. The movement has been supported nationally by at least 12 prominent
individuals and their associated organizations. Fox News called many of the
protests in 2009 "FNC Tax Day Tea Parties" which it promoted on air
and sent speakers to. This was to include then-host Glenn Beck, though Fox came
to discourage him from attending later events.
Opposition to the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) has been
consistent within the Tea Party movement. Said law has been often referred to
as 'Obamacare' by critics. This has been an aspect of an overall anti-government message throughout
tea party rhetoric that
includes as well opposition to gun control measures
and to federal spending increases.
Activism by Tea Party people against
the major health-care reform law from 2009 to 2014 has, according to the Kansas City Star, focused
on pushing for Congressional victories so that a repeal measure would pass both
houses and that President Obama's veto could be
overridden. Some conservative public officials and commentators such as
columnist Ramesh Ponnuru have criticized
these views as completely unrealistic with the chances of overriding a Presidential
veto being slim, with Ponnuru stating that "If you have
in 2017 a Republican government... and it doesn't get rid of Obamacare, then I
think that is a huge political disaster".
Tea Party in U.S. elections
Aside from rallies, some groups
affiliated with the Tea Party movement began to focus on getting out the vote
and ground game efforts on behalf of candidates supportive of their agenda
starting in the 2010 elections.
Various Tea Party groups have endorsed
candidates in the elections. In the 2010 midterm elections, The New York Times identified 138
candidates for Congress with significant Tea Party support, and reported that
all of them were running as Republicans—of whom 129 were running for the House and 9 for
the Senate. A poll by
the Wall
Street Journal and NBC
News in mid-October showed 35% of likely voters were
Tea-party supporters, and they favored the Republicans by 84% to 10%.The first
Tea Party affiliated candidate to be elected into office is believed to be Dean
Murray, a Long Island businessman, who
won a special election for a New York State Assembly seat in February 2010.
According to statistics on an NBC
blog, overall, 32% of the candidates that were backed by the Tea Party or
identified themselves as a Tea Party member won election. Tea Party supported candidates
won 5 of 10 Senate races (50%) contested, and 40 of 130 House races (31%)
contested. In the primaries for Colorado, Nevada and Delaware the
Tea-party backed Senate Republican nominees defeated "establishment"
Republicans that had been expected to win their respective Senate races, but
went on to lose in the general election to their Democratic opponents. The Tea Party is generally associated with the Republican Party. Most politicians with the "Tea Party brand" have run as Republicans. In recent elections in the 2010s, Republican primaries have been the site of competitions between the more conservative, Tea Party wing of the party and the more moderate, establishment wing of the party. The Tea Party has incorporated various conservative internal factions of the Republican Party to become a major force within the party.
Tea Party candidates were less successful
in the 2012 election, winning four of 16 Senate races contested, and losing
approximately 20% of the seats in the House that had been gained in 2010. Tea
Party Caucus founder Michele Bachmann was re-elected to the House by a narrow
margin.
A May 2014 Kansas City Star article
remarked about the Tea Party movement post-2012, "Tea party candidates are
often inexperienced and sometimes underfunded. More traditional Republicans—
hungry for a win— are emphasizing electability over philosophy, particularly
after high-profile losses in 2012. Some in the GOP have made that strategy
explicit."
In June 2014, Tea Party favorite Dave
Brat unseated the sitting GOP House Majority
Leader Eric Cantor. Brat had
previously been known as an economist and a
professor at Randolph–Macon
College, running a grassroots conservative campaign that espoused
greater fiscal restraint and his Milton Friedman-based viewpoints.
Brat has since won the seat by a comfortable margin.In November 2014, Tim Scott became the first African-American member of the U.S. Senate from the South since the reconstruction era, winning the South Carolina seat formerly held by Jim DeMint in a special election. Scott remarked to political commentator Glenn Beck that the Tea Party is neither racist nor sexist, and he also stated that he hoped to see more good-faith efforts to work together between the tea party and political factions in the future. The Senator had been endorsed by several figures within the Tea Party movement prior to his election.
In the 2014 elections in Texas, the Tea Party made large gains, with numerous Tea Party favorites being elected into office, like Dan Patrick as Lieutenant Governor and Ken Paxton as Attorney General, in addition to numerous other candidates.
Current status
Tea Party activities have declined
since 2010. According to
Harvard professor Theda Skocpol, the number of Tea
Party chapters across the country has slipped from about 1,000 to 600 between
2009 and 2012, but that this is still "a very good survival rate."
Mostly, Tea Party organizations are said to have shifted away from national
demonstrations to local issues. A shift in the operational approach used by the
Tea Party has also affected the movement's visibility, with chapters placing
more emphasis on the mechanics of policy and getting candidates elected rather
than staging public events.
The Tea Party's involvement in the 2012 GOP
presidential primaries was minimal, owing to divisions over whom to endorse as
well as lack of enthusiasm for all the candidates. Which is not to say the 2012
GOP ticket has not had an influence on the Tea Party: following the selection
of Paul
Ryan as Mitt Romney's
vice-presidential running mate, the New York Times declared
that the once fringe of the conservative coalition, Tea Party lawmakers are now
"indisputably at the core of the modern Republican Party."
Though the Tea Party has had a large
influence on the Republican Party, it has also attracted major criticism by
public figures within the Republican coalition as well. U.S.
Speaker of the House John Boehner has particularly
condemned many Tea Party connected politicians for their behavior during the 2013
U.S. debt ceiling crisis. "I think they're misleading
their followers,” Boehner has been publicly quoted as saying, "They're
pushing our members in places where they don't want to be, and frankly I just
think that they've lost all credibility." In the words of The Kansas
City Star, Boehner "stamped out Tea Party resistance to
extending the debt ceiling... worried that his party’s prospects would be
damaged by adherence to the Tea Party’s preference for default".
One 2013 survey found that, in
political terms, 20% of self-identified Republicans stated that they considered
themselves as part of the social movement. Tea Party members rallied at the
U.S. Capitol on February 27, 2014; their demonstrations celebrated the fifth
anniversary of the movement coming together.[10]
IRS controversy
Main article: 2013
IRS controversy
In May 2013, the Associated Press and The New
York Times reported that the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) flagged Tea Party groups and other conservative
groups for review of their applications for tax-exempt status during the 2012
election. This led to both political and public condemnation of the agency, and
triggered multiple investigations.
Some groups were asked for donor
lists, which is usually a violation of IRS policy. Groups were also asked for
details about family members and about their postings on social networking
sites. Lois Lerner, head of the IRS
division that oversees tax-exempt groups, apologized on behalf of the IRS and
stated, "That was wrong. That was absolutely incorrect, it was insensitive
and it was inappropriate." Testifying before Congress in March 2012, IRS
Commissioner Douglas Shulman denied that the groups were being targeted based
on their political views.
Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah,
the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, rejected the apology as
insufficient, demanding “ironclad guarantees from the I.R.S. that it will adopt
significant protocols to ensure this kind of harassment of groups that have a
constitutional right to express their own views never happens again.”
The resulting Senate subcommittee
report ultimately found there had been “no bias”, though Republican committee
members filed a dissenting report.[148] According to the Treasury
Inspector General for Tax Administration, 18% of the
conservative groups that had Tea Party or other related terms in their names
flagged for extra scrutiny by the IRS had no evidence of political activity. Michael Hiltzik, writing in the Los Angeles Times, stated that
evidence put forth in the House report indicated the IRS had been struggling to
apply complicated new rules to nonprofits that may have been involved in
political activity, and had also flagged liberal-sounding groups. Of all the
groups flagged, the only one to lose tax exempt status was a group that trains
Democratic women to run for office.
Ron Paul's non-profit conservative
organization, Campaign for Liberty, is
currently involved (circa 2014) in a lawsuit against the IRS. Dr. Paul feels
they were unfairly targeting his organization.
After a two year investigation, the
Justice Department announced in October 2015 that "We found no evidence
that any IRS official acted based on political, discriminatory, corrupt, or
other inappropriate motives that would support a criminal prosecution."
Composition See also: List of politicians affiliated with
the Tea Party movementMembership and demographics
Several polls have been conducted on the demographics of the movement. Though the various polls sometimes turn up slightly different results, they tend to show that Tea Party supporters tend more likely than Americans overall to be white, male, married, older than 45, regularly attending religious services, conservative, and to be more wealthy and have more education. Broadly speaking, multiple surveys have found between 10% and 30% of Americans identify as a member of the Tea Party movement. Most Republicans and 20% of Democrats support the movement according to one Washington Post-ABC News poll.According to The Atlantic, the three main groups that provide guidance and organization for the protests, FreedomWorks, dontGO, and Americans for Prosperity, state that the demonstrations are an organic movement. Law professor and commentator Glenn Reynolds, best known as author of the Instapundit political blog, said in the New York Post that: "These aren't the usual semiprofessional protesters who attend antiwar and pro-union marches. These are people with real jobs; most have never attended a protest march before. They represent a kind of energy that our politics hasn't seen lately, and an influx of new activists." Conservative political strategist Tim Phillips, now head of Americans for Prosperity, has remarked that the Republican Party is "too disorganized and unsure of itself to pull this off".
The Christian Science Monitor has noted that Tea Party activists "have been called neo-Klansmen and knuckle-dragging hillbillies", adding that "demonizing tea party activists tends to energize the Democrats' left-of-center base" and that "polls suggest that tea party activists are not only more mainstream than many critics suggest," but that a majority of them are women, not angry white men. The article quoted Juan Williams as saying that the Tea Party's opposition to health reform was based on self-interest rather than racism.
A Gallup poll conducted in March 2010 found that—other than gender, income and politics—self-described Tea Party members were demographically similar to the population as a whole. A 2014 article from Forbes.com stated that the Tea Party's membership appears reminiscent of the people who supported independent Ross Perot’s presidential campaigns in the 1990s.
When surveying supporters or participants of the Tea Party movement, polls have shown that they are to a very great extent more likely to be registered Republican, have a favorable opinion of the Republican Party and an unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party. The Bloomberg National Poll of adults 18 and over showed that 40% of Tea Party supporters are 55 or older, compared with 32% of all poll respondents; 79% are white, 61% are men and 44% identify as "born-again Christians", compared with 75%, 48.5%, and 34%[173] for the general population, respectively.
According to Susan Page and Naomi Jagoda of USA Today in 2010, the Tea Party was more "a frustrated state of mind" than "a classic political movement".Tea party members "are more likely to be married and a bit older than the nation as a whole". They are predominantly white, but other groups make up just under one-fourth of their ranks. They believe that the federal government has become too large and powerful.
Polling of supporters
An October 2010 Washington Post canvass of local Tea
Party organizers found 99% said "concern about the economy" was an
"important factor". Various polls have also probed Tea Party
supporters for their views on a variety of political and controversial issues.
On the question of whether they think their own income taxes this year are
fair, 52% of Tea Party supporters told pollsters for CBS/New York Times that they were, versus
62% in the general population (including Tea Party supporters). A Bloomberg News poll found that
Tea Partiers are not against increased government action in all cases.
"The ideas that find nearly universal agreement among Tea Party supporters
are rather vague," says J. Ann Selzer, the pollster who created the
survey. "You would think any idea that involves more government action
would be anathema, and that is just not the case."
In advance of a new edition of their
book American Grace, political
scientists David E. Campbell of Notre Dame and Robert D. Putnam of Harvard
published in a The New
York Times opinion the results of their research into the political
attitudes and background of Tea Party supporters. Using a pre-Tea Party poll in
2006 and going back to the same respondents in 2011, they found the supporters
to be not "nonpartisan political neophytes" as often described, but
largely "overwhelmingly partisan Republicans" who were politically active
prior to the Tea Party. The survey found Tea Party supporters "no more
likely than anyone else" to have suffered hardship during the 2007–2010
recession. Additionally, the respondents were more concerned about
"putting God in government" than with trying to shrink government.
The 2010 midterm
elections demonstrated considerable skepticism within the Tea
Party movement with respect to the dangers and the reality of global warming. A New York Times/CBS News Poll during
the election revealed that only a small percentage of Tea Party supporters
considered global warming a serious problem, much less than the portion of the
general public that does. The Tea Party is strongly opposed to
government-imposed limits on carbon dioxide emissions as part of emissions trading legislation to
encourage use of fuels that emit less carbon dioxide. An example is the
movement's support of California
Proposition 23, which would suspend AB32, the Global Warming
Solutions Act of 2006.
The proposition failed to pass, with less than 40% voting in favor. Manyof the movement's members also favor
stricter measures against illegal immigration.
Polls found that just 7% of Tea Party
supporters approve of how Obama is doing his job compared to 50% (as of April
2010) of the general public, and that roughly 77% of supporters had voted for
Obama's Republican opponent, John McCain in 2008.
Tea Party rallied in Searchlight, Nevada
A University of
Washington poll of 1,695 registered voters in the state of Washington reported
that 73% of Tea Party supporters disapprove of Obama's policy of engaging with
Muslim countries, 88% approve of the controversial Arizona immigration law enacted in 2010
that requires police to question people they suspect are illegal immigrants for
proof of legal status, 54% feel that immigration is changing the culture in the
U.S. for the worse, 82% do not believe that gay and lesbian couples should have
the legal right to marry, and that about
52% believe that "compared to the size of the group, lesbians and gays
have too much political power".
Leadership
The movement has been supported
nationally by prominent individuals and organizations.
Individuals
An October 2010 Washington Post canvass of 647 local
Tea Party organizers asked "which national figure best represents your
groups?" and got the following responses: no one 34%, Sarah Palin 14%,
Glenn Beck 7%, Jim DeMint 6%, Ron Paul 6%, Michele Bachmann 4%.
The success of candidates popular
within the Tea Party movement has boosted Palin's visibility. Rasmussen and
Schoen (2010) conclude that "She is the symbolic leader of the movement,
and more than anyone else has helped to shape it."
In June 2008, Congressman Dr. Ron Paul
announced his non-profit organization called Campaign for Liberty as a way
of continuing the grassroots support involved in Ron Paul's 2007-2008 presidential
run. This announcement
corresponded with the suspension of his campaign
In July 2010, Bachmann formed the
House congressional Tea Party Caucus. This congressional caucus, which
Bachmann chaired, is devoted to the Tea Party's stated principles of
"fiscal responsibility, adherence to the Constitution, and limited
government". As of March 31, 2011, the caucus consisted of 62 Republican
representatives Rep. Jason Chaffetz and Melissa
Clouthier have accused them of trying to hijack or co-opt the grassroots Tea
Party Movement.
Organizations
the self-reported membership numbers below are several
years old.
- Tea Party Patriots, an organization with more than 1,000 affiliated groups across the nation that proclaims itself to be the "Official Home of the Tea Party Movement".
- Americans for Prosperity, an organization founded by David H. Koch in 2003, and led by Tim Phillips. The group has over 1 million members in 500 local affiliates and led protests against health care reform in 2009.
- FreedomWorks, an organization led by Matt Kibbe. The group has over 1 million members in 500 local affiliates. It makes local and national candidate endorsements
- Tea Party Express, a national bus tour run by Our Country Deserves Better PAC, itself a conservative political action committee created by Sacramento-based Republican consulting firm Russo, Marsh, and Associates.[192][193][194][195]
FreedomWorks, Americans for
Prosperity, and DontGo, a free market political activist non-profit group, were
guiding the Tea Party movement in April, 2009, according to The Atlantic. Americans
for Prosperity and FreedomWorks were "probably the leading partners"
in the September, 2009 Taxpayer March
on Washington, also known as the 9/12 Tea Party, according to The Guardian.
For-profit businesses
- Tea Party Nation, which sponsored the National Tea Party Convention that was criticized for its $549 ticket price and because Palin was apparently paid $100,000 for her appearance (which she put towards Sarah PAC).Informal organizations and coalitions
- The National Tea Party Federation, formed on April 8, 2010, by several leaders in the Tea Party movement to help spread its message and to respond to critics with a quick, unified response.
- The Nationwide Tea Party Coalition, a loose national coalition of several dozen local tea party groups.Student movement
- Tea Party Students organized the 1st National Tea Party Students Conference, which was hosted by Tea Party Patriots at its American Policy Summit in Phoenix on February 25–27, 2011. The conference included sessions with Campus Reform, Students For Liberty, Young America’s Foundation, and Young Americans for Liberty.[204]
Other influential organizations
include Americans for
Limited Government, the training organization American Majority, the Our Country
Deserves Better political action committee, and Glenn Beck's 9-12 Project, according to the National Journal in
February, 2010.
Fundraising
Sarah Palin headlined four
"Liberty at the Ballot Box" bus tours, to raise money for candidates
and the Tea Party Express. One of the tours visited 30 towns and covered 3,000
miles. Following the formation of the Tea Party Caucus, Michele Bachmann raised
$10 million for a political action
committee, MichelePAC, and sent funds to the campaigns of Sharron
Angle, Christine O'Donnell, Rand
Paul, and Marco Rubio. In September
2010, the Tea Party Patriots announced
it had received a $1,000,000 USD donation from an anonymous donor
Support of Koch brothers
Main article: Political activities of the Koch family
In an August 30, 2010, article in The New Yorker, Jane Mayer said that the
brothers David H. Koch and Charles G. Koch and Koch Industries provided financial
support to one of the organizations that became part of the Tea Party movement
through Americans for
Prosperity The AFP's "Hot Air Tour" was organized to
fight against taxes on carbon use and the activation of a cap and trade program. Former U.K. ambassador
Sir Christopher Meyer wrote in the Daily Mail that the
Tea Party movement is a mix of "grassroots populism, professional
conservative politics, and big money", the last supplied in part by the
Kochs. A Koch Industries company
spokesperson issued a statement saying "No funding has been provided by
Koch companies, the Koch foundation, or Charles Koch or David Koch specifically
to support the tea parties".
Public opinion 2010 polling
A USA Today/Gallup poll conducted in March 2010 found that 28% of
those surveyed considered themselves supporters of the Tea Party movement, 26%
opponents, and 46% neither. These figures remained stable through January 2011,
but public opinion changed by August 2011. In a USA Today/Gallup poll conducted in January 2011, approximately
70% of adults, including approximately 9 out of 10 Republicans, felt Republican
leaders in Congress should give consideration to Tea Party movement ideas. In
August 2011, 42% of registered voters, but only 12% of Republicans, said Tea
Party endorsement would be a "negative" and that they would be
"less likely" to vote for such a candidate.
A Gallup Poll in April
2010 found 47% of Americans had an unfavorable image of the Tea Party movement,
as opposed to 33% who had a favorable opinion A 2011 opinion survey by
political scientists David E. Campbell and Robert D. Putnam found the
Tea Party ranked at the bottom of a list of "two dozen" American
"religious, political, and racial groups" in terms of favorability –
"even less liked than Muslims and atheists." In November 2011, the New York Times cited
opinion polls showing that support for the Tea Party had "fallen sharply
even in places considered Tea Party strongholds." It quoted pollster Andrew Kohut speculating that
the Tea Party position in congress was perceived as "too extreme and not
willing to compromise."
A CBS News/New York Times poll in September 2010 showed 19% of respondents
supported the movement, 63% did not, and 16% said they did not know. In the
same poll, 29% had an unfavorable view of the Tea Party, compared to 23% with a
favorable view. The same poll retaken in August 2011 found that 20% of
respondents had a favorable view of the Tea Party and 40% had an unfavorable
view. A CNN/ORC poll taken September 23–25, 2011 found that the
favorable/unfavorable ratio was 28% versus 53%.
An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll in September 2010 found 27% considered
themselves Tea Party supporters. 42% said the Tea Party has been good for the
U.S. political system; 18% called it a bad thing. Those with an unfavorable
view of the Tea Party outnumbered those with a favorable view 36–30%. In
comparison, the Democratic Party was viewed unfavorably by a 42–37% margin, and
the Republican Party by 43–31%.
A poll conducted by the Quinnipiac
University Polling Institute in March 2010 found that 13% of
national adults identified themselves as part of the Tea Party movement but
that the Tea Party had a positive opinion by a 28–23% margin with 49% who did
not know enough about the group to form an opinion. A similar poll conducted by
the Winston Group in April 2010 found that 17% of American registered voters
considered themselves part of the Tea Party movement.
After debt-ceiling crisis
After the mid-2011 debt ceiling
crisis, polls became more unfavorable to the Tea Party. According to a Gallup
poll, 28% of adults disapproved of the Tea Party compared to 25% approving, and
noted that "the national Tea Party movement appears to have lost some
ground in popular support after the blistering debate over raising the nation's
debt ceiling in which Tea Party Republicans...fought any compromise on taxes
and spending". Similarly, a Pew poll found that 29% of respondents thought
Congressional Tea Party supporters had a negative effect compared to 22%
thinking it was a positive effect. It noted that "the new poll also finds
that those who followed the debt ceiling debate very closely have more negative
views about the impact of the Tea Party than those who followed the issue less
closely." A CNN/ORC poll put disapproval at 51% with a 31% approval.
2012 polling
A Rasmussen Reports poll
conducted in April 2012 showed 44% of likely U.S. voters held at least a
somewhat favorable view of Tea Party activists, while 49% share an unfavorable
opinion of them. When asked if the Tea Party movement would help or hurt
Republicans in the 2012 elections, 53% of Republicans said they see the Tea
Party as a political plus.
2013 and 2014 polling
A February 2014 article from Forbes.com reported
about the past few years, "Nationally, there is no question that negative
views of the Tea Party have risen. But core support seems to be holding
steady." In October 2013, Rasmussen Reports research found as
many respondents, 42% of them to be exact, identify with the Tea Party as with
President Obama. However, while 30% of those polled viewed the movement
favorably, 50% were unfavorable; in addition, 34% considered the movement a
force for good while 43% considered them bad for the nation. On major national
issues, 77% of Democrats said their views were closest to Obama’s; in contrast,
76% of Republicans and 51% of unaffiliated voters identified closely with the
Tea Party.
Other survey data over recent years
show past trends of partisan divides about the Tea Party remaining. For
example, a Pew Research Center poll from
October 2013 reported that 69% of Democrats had an unfavorable view of the
movement in contrast to 49% of independents and 27% of Republicans.[10] A CNN/ORC poll
also conducted October 2013 generally showed that 28% of Americans were
favorable to the Tea party while 56% were unfavorable.[228] In an AP/GfK
survey from January 2014, 27% of respondents stated that they considered
themselves a Tea Party supporter in comparison to 67% that said that they were
not.
Beginning in 2009, the Gadsden flag became widely used
as a protest symbol by Tea Party protesters nationwide. It was also displayed
by members of Congress at Tea Party rallies. Some lawmakers dubbed it a
political symbol due to the Tea Party connection and the political nature of
Tea Party supporters. The Second Revolution flag gained national attention on
January 19, 2010. It is a version of the Betsy Ross flag with a Roman
numeral "II" in the center of the circle of 13 stars symbolizing a
second revolution in America. The Second Revolution flag has been called
synonymous with Tea Party causes and events.
"Teabagger"
Some members of the movement adopted
the term as a verb, and a few others referred to themselves as "teabaggers." News media
and progressive commentators outside the movement began to use the term
mockingly and derisively, alluding to the sexual connotation of the term when
referring to Tea Party protesters. The first pejorative use of the term was in
2007 by Indiana
Democratic Party Communications Director Jennifer Wagner. The use of the double entendre evolved from Tea
Party protest sites encouraging readers to "Tea bag the fools in DC"
to the political left adopting the term for derogatory jokes. It has been used
by several media outlets to humorously refer to Tea Party-affiliated
protestors. Some conservatives have advocated that the non-vulgar meaning of
the word be reclaimed. Grant Barrett, co-host of the A Way with Words radio
program, has listed teabagger
as a 2009 buzzword meaning, "a derogatory name for attendees of Tea
Parties, probably coined in allusion to a sexual practice".
Commentary by the Obama administration
On April 29, 2009, Obama commented on
the Tea Party protests during a townhall meeting in Arnold, Missouri: "Let me just
remind them that I am happy to have a serious conversation about how we are
going to cut our health care costs down over the long term, how we're going to
stabilize Social Security. Claire McCaskill and I are working diligently to do
basically a thorough audit of federal spending. But let's not play games and
pretend that the reason is because of the recovery act, because that's just a
fraction of the overall problem that we've got. We are going to have to tighten
our belts, but we're going to have to do it in an intelligent way. And we've
got to make sure that the people who are helped are working American families,
and we're not suddenly saying that the way to do this is to eliminate programs
that help ordinary people and give more tax cuts to the wealthy. We tried that
formula for eight years. It did not work. And I don't intend to go back to
it."
On April 15, 2010, Obama noted the
passage of 25 different tax cuts over the past year, including tax cuts for 95%
of working Americans. He then remarked, "So I've been a little amused over
the last couple of days where people have been having these rallies about
taxes. You would think they would be saying thank you. That's what you'd
think."
On September 20, 2010, at a town hall
discussion sponsored by CNBC, Obama said healthy skepticism about government
and spending was good, but it was not enough to just say "Get control of
spending", and he challenged the Tea Party movement to get specific about
how they would cut government debt and spending: "And so the challenge, I
think, for the Tea Party movement is to identify specifically what would you
do. It's not enough just to say, get control of spending. I think it's
important for you to say, I'm willing to cut veterans' benefits, or I'm willing
to cut Medicare or Social Security benefits, or I'm willing to see these taxes
go up. What you can't do—which is what I've been hearing a lot from the other
side—is say we're going to control government spending, we're going to propose
$4 trillion of additional tax cuts, and that magically somehow things are
going to work."
Media coverage
US News and World Report reported that the
nature of the coverage of the protests has become part of the story. On CNN's Situation
Room, journalist Howard Kurtz commented that
"much of the media seems to have chosen sides." He says that Fox News
portrayed the protests "as a big story, CNN as a modest story, and MSNBC as a great
story to make fun of. And for most major newspapers, it's a nonstory."
There were reports that the movement had been actively
promoted by the Fox News Channel.
Tea Party protesters walk towards the United States Capitol during the Taxpayer March
on Washington, September 12, 2009.
According to Fairness and
Accuracy in Reporting, a progressive media watchdog,
there is a disparity between large coverage of the Tea Party movement and
minimal coverage of larger movements. In 2009, the major Tea Party protests
were quoted twice as often as the National
Equality March despite a much lower turnout. In 2010, a Tea Party
protest was covered 59 times more than the US Social Forum (177 Tea
Party mentions versus 3 for Social Forum) despite an attendance that was 25
times smaller in size (600 Tea Party attendees versus at least 15,000 for
Social Forum).
In April 2010, responding to a
question from the media watchdog group Media Matters posed the
previous week, Rupert Murdoch, the chief
executive of News Corporation, which owns Fox
News, said, "I don't think we should be supporting the Tea Party or any
other party." That same week Fox News canceled an appearance by Sean Hannity at a Cincinnati Tea Party
rally.
Following the September 12 Taxpayer March
on Washington, Fox News said it was the only cable news outlet to cover
the emerging protests and took out full-page ads in The
Washington Post, the New York Post, and The Wall Street Journal with a prominent
headline reading, "How did ABC, CBS, NBC,
MSNBC, and CNN miss this story?"] CNN news anchor Rick Sanchez disputed Fox's
assertion, pointing to various coverage of the event. CNN, NBC, CBS, MSNBC, and
CBS Radio News provided various forms of live coverage of the rally in
Washington throughout the day on Saturday, including the lead story on CBS
Evening News.
James Rainey of the Los Angeles Times said
MSNBC's attacks on the tea parties paled compared to Fox's support, but that
MSNBC personalities Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews were hardly subtle
in disparaging the movement. Howard Kurtz has said that,
"These [FOX] hosts said little or nothing about the huge deficits run up
by President Bush, but Barack
Obama's budget and tax plans have driven them to tea. On the other hand, CNN
and MSNBC may have dropped the ball by all but ignoring the protests."
In the January/February 2012 issue of Foreign Affairs, Francis Fukuyama stated the Tea
Party is supporting "politicians who serve the interests of precisely
those financiers and corporate elites they claim
to despise" and inequality while
comparing and contrasting it with the occupy movement.
Tea Party's views of media coverage
In October 2010, a survey conducted by
The Washington
Post found that the majority of local Tea Party organizers
consider the media coverage of their groups to be fair. Seventy-six percent of
the local organizers said media coverage has been fair while 23 percent have
said coverage was unfair. This was based on responses from all 647 local Tea
Party organizers the Post was
able to contact and verify, from a list of more than 1,400 possible groups
identified.
Perceptions of the Tea Party
The movement has been called a mixture
of conservative libertarian, and populist activists.
As stated before, opinions in terms of the U.S. major political parties play a
large role in terms of attitudes about the Tea Party movement, with one study
finding that 20% of self-identified Republicans personally view themselves as
part of the Tea Party.
The movement has sponsored protests and
supported political candidates circa 2009. Since the movement's inception, in
the late 00's, left wing groups have accused the party of racism and
intolerance. Left leaning opponents have cited various incidents as evidence
that the movement is, in their opinion, propelled by various forms of bigotry.
Supporters say the incidents are isolated acts attributable to a small fringe
that is not representative of the movement. Accusations that the news media are
biased either for or against the movement are common, while polls and surveys have
been faced with issues regarding the population surveyed, and the
meaningfulness of poll results from disparate groups.
Although the Tea Party has a
libertarian element in terms of some issue convictions, most American
libertarians do not support the movement enough to identify with it. A 2013
survey by the Public Religion
Research Institute (PRRI) found that 61% of identified libertarians stated
they did not consider themselves part of the tea party. This split exists due
to the strong Christian right influence in the
movement, which puts the majority of the tea party movement at direct odds
against libertarians on issues such as the war on drugs (with the
aforementioned survey finding that 71% of libertarians support legalizing
marijuana). Some libertarian leaning supporters have grown increasingly annoyed
by the influx of religious social issues into the movement. Many in the
movement would prefer the complex social issues such as homosexuality,
abortion, and religion to be left out of the discussion, while instead
increasing the focus on limited government and states' rights.
According to a review in Publishers Weekly published
in 2012, professor Ronald P. Formisano in The Tea Party: A Brief History provides an "even-handed
perspective on and clarifying misconceptions about America’s recent political
phenomenon" since "party supporters are not isolated zealots, and
may, like other Americans, only want to gain control over their
destinies". Professor Formisano sees underlying social roots and draws a
parallel between the tea party movement and past support for independent
candidate Ross Perot a similar point to
that made in Forbes as mentioned
earlier.
Controversy
The final round of debate before
voting on the health
care bill was marked with vandalism and widespread threats of
violence to at least ten Democratic lawmakers across the country, which created
public relations problems for the fledgling Tea Party movement. On March 22,
2010, in what the New York Times called "potentially the most dangerous of
many acts of violence and threats against supporters of the bill," a Lynchburg, Virginia Tea Party
organizer and the Danville, Virginia Tea Party
Chairman both posted the home address of Representative Tom Perriello's brother
(mistakenly believing it was the Congressman's address) on their websites, and
encouraged readers to "drop by" to express their anger against Representative
Perriello's vote in favor of the healthcare bill. The following day, after
smelling gas in his house, a severed gas line that connected to a propane tank was discovered on
Perriello's brother's screened-in porch. Local police and FBI
investigators determined that it was intentionally cut as an act of vandalism.
Perriello's brother also received a threatening letter referencing the
legislation. Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli stated that
posting a home address on a website and encouraging people to visit is "an
appalling approach. It's not civil discourse, it's an invitation to
intimidation and it's totally unacceptable." Leaders of the Tea Party
movement tried to contain the public relations damage by denouncing the violent
acts and distancing themselves from those behind the acts. One Tea Party
website issued a response saying the Tea Party member's action of posting the
address "was not requested, sanctioned or endorsed by the Lynchburg Tea
Party". The director of the Northern Colorado Tea Party said,
"Although many are frustrated by the passage of such controversial
legislation, threats are absolutely not acceptable in any form, to any
lawmaker, of any party."
In early July 2010, the North Iowa Tea
Party (NITP) posted a billboard showing a photo of Adolf Hitler with the heading
"National Socialism", one of Barack Obama with the heading
"Democrat Socialism", and one of Vladimir Lenin with the
heading "Marxist Socialism", all three marked with the word
"change" and the statement "Radical leaders prey on the fearful
and naive". It received sharp criticism, including some from other Tea
Party activists. NITP co-founder Bob Johnson acknowledged the anti-socialist
message may have gotten lost amid the fascist and communist images. Following a
request from the NITP, the billboard was removed on July 14
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