Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Black Tea Party For The Week Of January 23rd, 2015 | Black Hollywood Live – Video


Black Tea Party For The Week Of January 23rd, 2015 | Black Hollywood Live
Subscribe to Black Hollywood Live #39;s YouTube Channel for more videos: http://youtube.com/blackhollywoodlive BHL: Black Tea Party -- In this episode Black Hollywood Live hosts Rome Moore, Stacy...

By: Black Hollywood Live

View original post here:
Black Tea Party For The Week Of January 23rd, 2015 | Black Hollywood Live - Video

Boehner says tea party makes money by beating the dickens out of me

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio

J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP

House Speaker John Boehner said that tea party groups are making lots of money by attacking his leadership and questioning his conservative credentials.

In an exclusive joint interview with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to air on CBSs 60 Minutes Sunday, Boehner, R-Ohio, defends his record and takes a swipe at unnamed organizations that have been critical of him.

Several tea party organizations and tea party-supported Republican members of the House of Representatives have accused Boehner of being too willing to negotiate with congressional Democrats and President Barack Obama and unwilling to stand up for conservative principles.

The issue with the tea party isnt one ofstrategy. Its not one of a different vision, Boehner said in excerpts provided by 60 Minutes. Its a disagreement over tactics, from time to time. Frankly, a lot is being driven by national groups here in Washington who have raised money and just beating the dickens out of me.

Boehner added: They raise money, put it in their pocket, and pay themselves big salaries.

Read more:
Boehner says tea party makes money by beating the dickens out of me

Tea Party spawns GOP nightmare: How its already ruining the partys 16 strategy

If youre understandably perplexed by the Republican Partys apparent decision to enter the post-Obama era by nominating either another member of the Bush dynasty, or another version of Mitt Romney, theres at least one way to think about it that might help explain the seemingly inexplicable. Put simply, the leaders of the GOP, the people who tend to be referred to as the establishment, fervently believe that in order to win in 2016, Republicans will have to convince voters that the party is once again what it was for much of the 20th century: safe, staid and, in a word, boring.

Of course, in a perfect world, Republicans would rather their presidential candidate be seen as a charismatic dynamo similar to Barack Obama in 2008 (or Ronald Reagan in the final weeks before Election Day 1980). But Republicans like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the partys de facto chief strategist, would likely consider a GOP nominee who reminds voters of a suburban accountant nearly as good especially after eight years of tumult under a Democratic president. Thus the appeal of your Jeb Bushes and Mitt Romneys and thus the establishments aversion to more fire-breathing types like Sens. Rand Paul and Ted Cruz.

The plan is obviously cynical, but its also pretty savvy. Its a testament to not only how much attention the party leaders pay to controlling the media narrative, but also how little they pay to, yknow, actual policy. And if all the GOP had to do between now and November 16 is keep troublemakers like Paul, Cruz and Mike Huckabee at a distance from the partys nomination, youd have to consider it in a strong position to win back the White House, on the strength of voter fatigue with the Democrats, if nothing else.

But heres the problem: Theres this thing called Congress, which is now the full responsibility of the GOP. And while there are plenty of GOPers in Congress who care deeply about which party holds 1600 Pennsylvania, there are also more than a few who think they were elected to change Washington. They answer to conservative activists who will no longer trim their sails so a RINO can enjoy free flights on Air Force One. And some of the issues these folks want to talk about wont jibe with that nice accountant-next-door narrative establishment Republicans have been building.

You could make an argument that this barely subterranean point of tension was brought closer to the surface on Day 1 of the new Congress, when the GOP decided to kick off a multi-part plan to manufacture a fiscal crisis for Social Security in order to, ultimately, push through benefit cuts to what is arguably the most popular government program in U.S. history. But youd be on even firmer ground if you just focused on what the GOPs been up to in the past week. Take the vote in the House on Thursday to drastically curtail federal funding for abortions (which is already paltry), which passed more or less on a party-line vote, and which the White House has already said it will veto if it ever reaches Obamas desk. Symbolic and envelope-pushing measures intended to inspire a big fight over the right to choose is the kind of stuff that thrills the Tea Party, needless to say; but its not what youd expect to hear from that nice accountant next door. And that goes double for weird and recurring ontological conversations about the definition of rape.

Or if youd rather look at the Senate, where the aforementioned McConnell is nominally in control, think about Wednesdays vote on climate change namely, whether it exists and, if so, to what degree its humanitys fault. While its true that only one senator, Mississippis Roger Wicker, felt compelled to disagree with the contention that the Earths climate is warming, most Republicans voted against a provision that would credit humankind with significantly contributing to the problem. That is, needless to say, wildly at odds with scientific consensus across the globe; and dismissing the conclusions of essentially all of the worlds qualified scientists is yet another thing your nice neighbor-accountant would be unlikely to do.

To be fair, the Senate vote on climate change wasnt something Republicans in the Senate forced on McConnell. Instead, it was an example of the kind of thumb-in-the-eye procedural move that the Senates now-minority Democrats will be able to pull off every once in a while that has no legislative significance but can, at its best, make the difference between the parties crystal clear. All the same, whatever short-term damage Democrats were able to inflict on the GOP paled in comparison to that which it brought on itself, in the form of Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofes contention that those who think anthropogenic climate change is a reality are disrespecting God. Which is, again, not the kind of talk the GOP establishment wants to hear during this current, boring-is-best rebrand.

Now, the chances of anyone remembering any of these stories a few years from now are admittedly rather slim. So the point isnt to say that Republicans wont be able to succeed in 2016 because of one of the countless nutty things Inhofes said. What these stories underline, though, is that GOP leadership is going to find, for the umpteenth time in recent years, that persuading voters whove come to associate Republicans with the Tea Party that the days of Eisenhower and George H.W. Bush have returned will be much easier said than done.

Indeed, its a safe bet that the sentiment behind this Thursday quote from Republican congressman Charlie Dent, a relative moderate, will be echoed more than a few times by the GOP establishment between now and the next presidential election:Week one, we had a Speaker election that didnt go as well as a lot of us would have liked. Week two, we spent a lot of time talking about deporting children, a conversation a lot of us didnt want to have. Week three, were debating reportable rape and incest again, not an issue a lot of us wanted to have a conversation about. I just cant wait for week four.

The rest is here:
Tea Party spawns GOP nightmare: How its already ruining the partys 16 strategy

RERvideo-Peter Batura TEA Party Patriots Conf. 1-10-2015 – Video


RERvideo-Peter Batura TEA Party Patriots Conf. 1-10-2015
RERvideo at TEA Party Patriots Conf. Captured Live on Ustream at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/rer-video.

By: RERvideo

Read the rest here:
RERvideo-Peter Batura TEA Party Patriots Conf. 1-10-2015 - Video

Tea Party criticizes Obama in response to SOTU – Video


Tea Party criticizes Obama in response to SOTU
Rep. Curt Clawson #39;s Tea Party response to President Obama #39;s State of the Union Address tackles personal liberty and immigration issues.

By: USA TODAY

See the article here:
Tea Party criticizes Obama in response to SOTU - Video