Thursday, January 14, 2010

Tea Party 'Precinct Strategy' Seeks G.O.P. Takeover

This is exactly what I've argued all along. From the New York Times, "In Power Push, Movement Sees Base in G.O.P.":

The Tea Party movement ignited a year ago, fueled by anti-establishment anger. Now, Tea Party activists are trying to take over the establishment, ground up.

Across the country, they are signing up to be Republican precinct leaders, a position so low-level that it often remains vacant, but which comes with the ability to vote for the party executives who endorse candidates, approve platforms and decide where the party spends money.

A new group called the National Precinct Alliance says it has a coordinator in nearly every state to recruit Tea Party activists to fill the positions and has already swelled the number of like-minded members in Republican Party committees in Arizona and Nevada. Its mantra is this: take the precinct, take the state, take the party — and force it to nominate conservatives rather than people they see as liberals in Republican clothing.

Here, in a perennial battleground district outside Philadelphia, Tea Party activists are trying to strip the local committee of its influence in choosing the Republican nominee to run against Representative Patrick J. Murphy, a Democrat who won the seat in 2006 by about 1,500 votes.

After the local party said it would stick to its custom of endorsing a candidate rather than holding an open primary, Tea Party groups decided to hold their own candidate forum where people could cast a ballot. If the party does not yield, the groups say they will host a debate, too.

“We kind of changed the rules,” said Anastasia Przybylski, one of the organizers.

The Tea Party movement, named the original tax revolt in 1773, might be better described as a diverse, rambunctious and Internet-connected network of groups, powered by grass-roots anxiety about the economy, bailouts and increasing government involvement in health care. At one extreme are militia members who have shown up at meetings wearing guns and suggesting that institutions like the Federal Reserve be eliminated. At the other are those like Ms. Przybylski, who describes herself as “just a stay-at-home mom” who became agitated about the federal stimulus package.

And if the Democrats are big-government socialists, the Republicans, in the Tea Party mind, are enablers.

In some recent polls, a hypothetical Tea Party wins more support than Democrats or Republicans, and the most anti-establishment Tea Party activists push to fight as a third party. But as the movement looks toward the midterm elections in November, a growing number of activists argue that the best way to translate anger into influence is to infiltrate the Republican establishment (Democrats being, for the average Tea Partier, beyond redemption).

“If you want to have revenge against the Republican Party for using you for so many years, the best way is to turn around and use the Republican Party to your advantage,” said Eric Odom, a Tea Party activist in Chicago who recently started a political action committee, and on his blog urged Tea Partiers to stop complaining about the Republican Party and “move in and take it over” ....

The precinct strategy, like the Tea Party movement itself, has spread via the Internet, on sites like Resistnet.com. A National Tea Party Convention in Nashville next month will feature seminars on how to take over starting at the precinct level.

RTWT at the link.

I just received this note from Orange County Tea Party organizers:

It is VERY important for all Tea Party Patriots to attend this Monday's GOP Orange County Central Committee Meeting. Scott Baugh, Chairman of the OCGOP, will be giving a "barn burner" of a speech and will be outlining the direction of our county's party for the 2010 elections ... He provided some details of his speech and ... you DO NOT WANT TO MISS IT. It is so very important for us to be strong and unified for the 2010 elections. So, please, if you have an hour Monday night, please come ....

Also, that Monday night, Mark Meckler, National Coordinator and Board Member of the Tea Party Patriots ... He is flying in from Sacramento and Dawn Wildman, and other tea party patriots, will be driving up from San Diego. We need to be let the OCGOP know that we are unified, we care, and we are committed to a party of principles with action and not to a party of empty words.
I should have a report on the event late Monday or early Tuesday.

1 comments:

Left Coast Rebel said...

I think this is great news, actually. I am a tea partier, libertarian(with a small l) and GOPer so I obviously fit the bill as well