Tea Party

carroll Rick Scott Picks Excellent Running Mate for Florida Lieutenant GovernorFlorida Gubernatorial Candidate Rick Scott’s pick of Jennifer Carroll for lieutenant governor to be his running mate is bound to strengthen the Republican ticket.

Carroll is a business woman, and retired Lieutenant Commander in the United States Navy who serves in the Florida House of Representatives. Her background and positions demonstrate again that the tea party revolt against the vast expansion of government includes Americans from all backgrounds.

Guy Benson at Townhall.com comments:

-In a state where one in every seven voters is black — and nearly all are Democrats — Carroll is a black Republican.

-As a native of Trinidad, Carroll is an immigrant who could help soften Scott’s hard-line image on an issue that cuts both ways in a state with a large immigrant population.

-She packs a celebrity punch: Her son, Nolan II, is a rookie cornerback and kick returner for the Miami Dolphins, drafted out of the University of Maryland.

-She became the first black woman elected to the Legislature in a special election in 2003.

-She retired after 20 years in the Navy, where she rose to the rank of lieutenant commander aviation maintenance officer.

-Her official legislative biography notes that she is a life member of both the NAACP and the National Rifle Association.

Yup, just your average, run-of-mill, typical Angry White Guy Republican…

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In this video, William Voegeli discusses the fact that the federal government seems to only change in one direction – it expands.

Almost thirty years ago, President Reagan expressed the goal of limiting the growth of government, but with a Democrat Congress and what turned out to be the final phase of the Cold War, the size of the federal government and its deficits remained an intractable problem. Voters were ultimately not willing to give up government program bestowing sizable benefits to some because the cost of each program spread across all taxpayers and therefore seemed small.

One time, in the 1990s, several factors combined to make it possible to finally get out of decades of deficit spending: the end of the Cold War, the first Republican Congress in forty years, a Democrat President willing to work with the Republicans and an unforeseen economic boom turned deficits into surpluses. Economists predicted that we would have surpluses far into the future.

Of course, the future turned out to be different. The war against terrorism after 9/11 and reckless spending supported by both Republican and Democrats quickly wiped out the surpluses and returned us to fairly typical deficits. Republicans were punished by angry voters and lost Congress in 2006 and the Presidency in 2008. But Democrats, after gaining control of Congress in 2006 and the White House in 2008, have turned out to be more reckless than ever. The subprime mortgage crisis and the financial meltdown of the fall of 2008 gave the Obama administration the pretext to ramp up spending resulting in deficits rising from a few hundred billion to 1.3 to 1.6 trillion dollars.

Can a majority of American voters be persuaded to consistently support candidates who will cut programs that benefit them? Voegelin states that libertarians and conservatives have made the intellectual case for the benefits of limiting government for decades. Yet powerful arguments about the overall benefits of limiting government on freedom and prosperity have not been enough to change the dynamics of an ever growing state. Roughly one third of the voters have been consistently supportive of the idea of limiting government, another third is ideologically committed to expanding government and the remaining third has vacillated between these two poles.

Today, an ideologically far left administration with an agenda to interject the federal government into more and more aspects of Americans’ lives, record deficits and the threat that our children and grandchildren will be worse off than we are when they have to have to deal with the consequences of bankruptcy have created unprecedented anger among the American majority.

If we cannot turn around the growth and power of the federal government in the elections of 2010 and 2012, it may be too late by the time enough Americans finally recognize the destruction of our economy and the loss of freedom.

The first test on whether we are able to restore America’s freedom and strength will occur a little more than two months from today when we elect a new House of Representatives, a third of the Senate, governors in over thirty-five states and countless other state and local officials. The choices will not all be perfect, but the Tea Party movement has yielded a wealth of principled candidates and has frightened Republican career politicians towards principled positions.

Two factors will determine whether we succeed: higher turnout at the polls from Americans concerned about our future and principled conservative and libertarian voters resisting the temptation to vote for third party candidates who may be purer in their beliefs, but who have no chance of winning.

The high level of anger against Democrats and the Obama administration is likely to ensure high voter turnout. Still, we cannot be complacent about this. A lot can happen in the next seventy days and Democrats will try to misdirect and confuse voters.

So far the Tea Party movement has recognized that it’s power is within the Republican Party. Not as another interest group, but as the force driving the Republican in the right direction. Dick Armey recently expressed this most forcefully with the following statement: “But let us be clear about one thing: The tea party movement is not seeking a junior partnership with the Republican Party, but a hostile takeover of it.”

There are still examples where a third party candidate is positioned to be the spoiler handing victory to the Democrat Left. For example, in Colorado former Congressman Tom Tancredo is running as a third party candidate for governor. There are a lot passionate supporters for Tancredo and his positions, but they should realize that a vote for Tancredo will just help the Democrat candidate. And Tom Tancredo should realize that if we wants respect from conservatives and a future political career, he should drop out of the race.

Some voters may still believe that their Democrat representative or a Democrat state official is different and is one of the most endangered species – a “moderate Democrat”. If you think this is the case for your representative, just keep in mind that his or her first vote in the current Congress was to elect Nancy Pelosi to be Speaker of the House, a radical choice that makes a mockery out of what moderates Democrats used to be. The true moderate Democrats today have already become Republicans.

So in about seventy days, American voters face a historic test: will they rise up in sufficient numbers to take control of the House and possibly the Senate and will they vote out Democrats across the board in state and local elections so that we can start the process of taking back our freedom? President Obama will still control the White House for two more years, but with a Republican Congress he can block some Republican initiatives, but he will not be able to further advance his radical expansion of government power.

Will we, for the first time, put a government in place that is ready to limit government power, respect individual liberty and reduce government spending? You get to decide on November 2, 2010.

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The mainstream media loves to describe the agenda of Republican Tea Party candidates as extreme. Here is a video (via America’s Best Choice) on who the real extremists are who are out of touch with the beliefs of the vast majority of Americans:

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tea party1 300x212 Beautiful Chaos   A Tea Party ManifestoFormer House Majority Leader Dick Armey and Matt Kibbe have written an editorial in the Wall Street Journal about what defines the Tea Party movement. Everyone concerned about the vast expansion of government under President Obama and the Democrats should read Armey and Kibbe’s “Tea Party Manifesto

They discuss the start of the movement and the famous rant by Rick Santelli calling for a “Chicago tea party”. Those of us who have been there from the beginning know that Santelli wasn’t the first to talk about a “tea party” (read, for example, Michelle Malkin’s “From the Boston Tea Party to your neighborhood pork protest” days before Santelli’s comments about a Chicago tea party), but Santelli played a crucial role in introducing American voters to the Tea Party movement.

The rebellion’s name derives from the glorious rant of CNBC commentator Rick Santelli, who in February 2009 called for a new “tea party” from the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. By doing so he reminded all of us that America was founded on the revolutionary principle of citizen participation, citizen activism and the primacy of the individual over the government. That’s the tea party ethos.

What’s the criteria for membership in the Tea Party?

The criteria for membership are straightforward: Stay true to principle even when it proves inconvenient, be assertive but respectful, add value and don’t take credit for other people’s work. Our community is built on the Trader Principle: We associate by mutual consent, to further shared goals of restoring fiscal responsibility and constitutionally limited government.

What frightens politicians in Washington is that the Tea Party is a movement without a centralized leader. It started at the grass roots and utilizes both traditional networking and the powerful new ways of networking made possible by social media on the internet.

The many branches of the tea party movement have created a virtual marketplace for new ideas, effective innovations and creative tactics. Best practices come from the ground up, around kitchen tables, from Facebook friends, at weekly book clubs, or on Twitter feeds. This is beautiful chaos—or, as the Nobel Prize-winning economist F.A. Hayek put it, “spontaneous order.”

Decentralization, not top-down hierarchy, is the best way to maximize the contributions of people and their personal knowledge. Let the leaders be the activists who have the best knowledge of local personalities and issues. In the real world, this is common sense. In Washington, D.C., this is considered radical.

This decentralized mode of operation is the opposite of how Democrats want to run America:

The big-government crowd is drawn to the compulsory nature of centralized authority. They can’t imagine an undirected social order. Someone needs to be in charge—someone who knows better. Big government is audacious and conceited.

By definition, government is the means by which citizens are forced to do that which they would not do voluntarily. Like pay high taxes. Or redistribute tax dollars to bail out the broken, bloated pension systems of state government employees. Or purchase, by federal mandate, a government-defined health-insurance plan that is unaffordable, unnecessary or unwanted.

For the left, and for today’s Democratic Party, every solution to every perceived problem involves more government—top-down dictates from bureaucrats presumed to know better what you need. Tea partiers reject this nanny state philosophy of redistribution and control because it is bankrupting our country.

Armey and Kibbe also make a bold statement about the relationship between the Tea Party movement and the Republican Party:

But let us be clear about one thing: The tea party movement is not seeking a junior partnership with the Republican Party, but a hostile takeover of it.

The American values of individual freedom, fiscal responsibility and limited government bind the ranks of our movement. That makes the tea party better than a political party. It is a growing community that can sustain itself after November, ensuring a better means of holding a new generation of elected officials accountable.

tea party protestor 300x225 Beautiful Chaos   A Tea Party ManifestoDemocrats love to talk about how the Tea Party could hurt Republicans. They fail to understand that the Tea Party movement energizes voters who will vote for Republican candidates. There is a struggle in Republican primaries between Tea Party candidates and traditional Republicans. In some primaries, the Tea Party candidate wins, in others the traditional Republican wins. This is a healthy conflict. It challenges the Republican Party to embrace the principles it has stood for since the time Ronald Reagan was president.

We won’t always agree on who is the better candidate. Some races create bitter rivalries. We will need to get beyond these conflicts and focus on getting the best candidate elected in November.

As the primaries wind down, Tea Party activists, Republicans and independent voters who oppose the policies of the Obama administration need to unite behind the Republican candidate for each office. If you support a third party candidate, you effectively increase the chance of the Democrats to continue the policies of the Obama administration. In November, voting for Republican candidates is the most effective way of advancing the Tea Party agenda.

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LTC Allen West At July 3rd Tea Party Rally: “You Got Four Months”

July 4, 2010

Lieutenant Colonel Allen West, candidate for Congress from Florida 22nd District, speaks to a Ft. Lauderdale Tea Party rally: Listen to LTC West. You have to “sing solo” and bring the message to your friends. “Now is the time for all of us to come together as Americans.” “You got four months. And if you [...]

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Paul Ryan’s Plan for Prosperity

June 25, 2010

Paul Ryan analyzes the current economic situation and presents his plan for returning America to prosperity at a speech to the US Chamber of Commerce. It is 23 minutes long, but well worth watching. Share and Enjoy:

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Sharron Angle: The Woman Who Will Retire Harry Reid

June 10, 2010

Tuesday’s primaries catapulted Republican women across the country to be the candidates opposing left-wing Democrats in the November election. One of the most important races is the senate race in Nevada where Senate Majority Leader Harry Read will face retirement in November. Sharron Angle won the Republican primary against two good candidates, Danny Tarkanian and [...]

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MSNBC’s Chris Matthews’ Newest Attempt To Smear the Tea Party Movement

June 10, 2010

MSNBC’s Chris Matthews has a new special on the Tea Party movement. Predictably, he tries to equate the Tea Party with militias and the potential for violence. Andrea Mitchell calls the Tea Party “militants” and Chris Matthews is shocked that Tea Party activists have opinions on what is constitutional and aren’t willing to blindly agree [...]

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Is ObamaCare the Key Event in a Political Realignment Toward Limited Constitutional Government?

June 9, 2010

When Democrats passed ObamaCare in March, polls showed that the majority of Americans opposed it. Supporters of the bill at the time dismissed these polls and hoped that over time Americans would support the monstrous health care legislation. New polls show that opposition to Obamacare continues to be stong. The latest Rasmussen poll of likely [...]

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Florida Congressional Candidate Allen West on Illegal Immigration

May 27, 2010

Florida Congressional Candidate Allen West gives a comprehensive critique of Obama’s complacency about illegal immigration. Listen to all 10 minutes of it! It is worth it! Help Allen West go to Washington to change this country. Listen to Allen West’s famous speech from last year. Share and Enjoy:

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