‘Nov. 2 will be a storm’: Tea party activists march on Capitol Hill
Posted in Health, News, Politics, what on September 12th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off
WASHINGTON – “Tea party” activists on Sunday promised to mobilize a surge of conservative voters in the November elections as they marched on Capitol Hill to mark the anniversary of their first major protest in Washington.
“They say a storm is coming,” conservative activist Ginni Thomas told thousands gathered under an overcast sky. “They ain’t seen nothing yet. Nov. 2 will be a storm!”
The march was organized by the Washington-based advocacy group FreedomWorks and took place on Sept. 12, a date branded by talk-show commentator Glenn Beck as a symbol of a new political awakening for conservatives. Beck did not attend Sunday’s event.
Tea party activists used a similar march last year to galvanize their opposition to Democrats‘ healthcare overhaul bill. In the process, they established themselves as leading voices of opposition to the Obama administration and a threat to incumbent Republicans deemed too moderate.
“Last year was our Woodstock,” said 69-year-old Anne Forgey, a retiree from Huntsville, Ala. “I came this year because I’m still worried about our country. I’m worried about the direction we’re headed. I believe they are trying to take away our freedom.”
Like many at the rally, Forgey carried a sign linking Obama’s policies to socialism or communism, a central charge of the small-government movement. Forgey’s read “No USSA” over a hand-drawn picture of the hammer and sickle of the former Soviet Union’s flag.
Although the tea party failed to block the healthcare bill, the movement had success in primary elections. Tea party-supported candidates won Republican nominations in several states and unseated GOP incumbents in two Senate primaries. The movement’s next test is Tuesday in Delaware, where Christine O’Donnell is trying to defeat Rep. Mike Castle for the Republican Party nomination for Senate.
The mood Sunday was upbeat and energized as activists marched from the Washington Monument to the west steps of the Capitol building chanting, “Vote them out!” A group from Savannah, Ga., was dressed as signers of the Constitution. Others lined up to sign a massive Battle of Gonzales Flag — an emblem from the Texas Revolution — brought in by a group from Austin.
Police and National Park Service officials do not issue crowd estimates for events on the National Mall. The crowd of thousands covered most of the Capitol’s west lawn stretching to the Capitol’s reflecting pool.
Many said they were surprised by the strong turnout given that a much larger rally, coordinated by Beck, was held just two weeks earlier.
Unlike that event, Sunday’s rally was a political call to arms and organizational tool. Several conservative figures used the event to publicize their initiatives and reach activists.
Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, touted her website, Liberty Central. Andrew Breitbart, the founder of several conservative websites, accused the mainstream media of ignoring the tea party movement and promised to offer an alternative.
“We are a citizen journalism army and we are going to take our country back,” he said.
FreedomWorks President Matt Kibbe said his group was already looking past election day.
“Every two years, politicians come to you to promise to change the culture in Washington,” Kibbe said. “Politicians in Washington don’t mean it. You can’t change the culture in Washington. But what the tea party is doing today is changing the culture in America.”
‘Nov. 2 will be a storm’: Tea party activists march on Capitol Hill