Can The Tea Party Remain A Political Force?

Fox News

[Note: Oklahoma is not the only state where some Tea Party “leaders” like the RIRO (Republican In Registration Only) Al Gerhart have soured many. Despite those problems, however, the Tea Party remains a potent force as this article shows.]

Three years after the Tea Party burst onto the national scene with its  anti-tax message, the diverse movement is trying to remain a political force and  shape elections – amid recent polling that shows shifting American  attitudes.

If the Republican primary battle is any gauge, the Tea Party on the ground  level is flexing its influence. Tea Party-aligned voters have picked the GOP  winner this year in 17 of 18 presidential primary contests, in races for which  exit polling information was available.

Yet on the third anniversary of the movement’s kick-off Tax Day rallies,  questions about the Tea Party’s future and strength remain. The movement — which includes thousands of small, independent groups across the country and  claims no allegiance to national political parties — was a major factor in the  2010 elections. With the help of many Tea Party-backed, first-time candidates,  Republicans took back the House in the landslide election.

However, a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll showed interest in the  movement may be waning.

The poll found 41 percent of Americans now say they support the Tea Party  movement, compared to 47 percent in September. It also found six in 10 Americans  have no real interest in additional information about the movement, and 41  percent aren’t interested “at all.”

In addition, 39 percent have at least some interest, but just 9 percent are  very interested. Among those with interest, roughly six in 10 already support  the movement, according to the April 5-8 poll of 1,103 adults.

The Tea Party’s biggest groups have tried this election season to recapture  the enthusiasm and interest from the midterms, holding rallies, bus tours and  even sponsoring GOP presidential debates. Yet they acknowledge that 2012 is not  the same political environment as the one in which the movement started.

“This is completely different than 2009,” said Sal Russo, co-founder and   chief strategist of Tea Party Express, which in September co-sponsored in  GOP debate in Tampa, Fla. “People were frantic. They were grabbing us by the  lapels and asking ‘what do we do.’ Now there’s less need for sign waving.”

Still, the group is firing up the bus again with an 11-day, cross-country  “Restoring the American Dream” tour that begins April 27.

Russo argued the recent poll indicates what Tea Party organizers already know — that roughly 85 percent of those who originally joined had never been  politically active, so there is now a smaller pool of the uninitiated. And he  said the movement has a basic, unchanged message on which most Americans already  agree — reduce the federal debt and reduce the size and cost of government.

The Tea Party Express has not endorsed presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney,  and Russo gave no indication Tuesday of his group’s immediate intention to do  so. However, the group has backed five Senate candidates, including Richard  Mourdock, a Republican Indiana state treasurer challenging long-time incumbent  Sen. Dick Luger in the party primary.

In the presidential primaries, Tea Party voters were by no means unanimous in  their choice. Exit polls show they picked a range of candidates depending on the  state — from Rick Santorum in his kickoff victory in Iowa to Newt Gingrich in  Georgia and South Carolina to Romney in Wisconsin.

The massive Tea Party Patriots also co-sponsored a presidential debate in the  GOP primary season, looking to make its mark on the closely watched race. That  decision, though, led to tension within the national network and eventually  resulted in co-founder Mark Meckler resigning from Tea Party Patriots. Meckler  reportedly was concerned that by co-sponsoring a debate, the Tea Party was  compromising its independence.

Fellow co-founder Jenny Beth Martin later defended the group, saying it  continues to be “transpartisan” and holds both parties accountable.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/04/17/tea-party-adapting-still-picking-winners-in-changing-political-climate/#ixzz1sNzqxayC


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