NYT: ‘Tea party’ avoids divisive issues
March 15th, 2010 . by TexasFredFor decades, faith and family have been at the center of the conservative movement. But as the Tea Party infuses conservatism with new energy, its leaders deliberately avoid discussion of issues like gay marriage or abortion.
God, life and family get little if any mention in statements or manifestos. The motto of the Tea Party Patriots, a large coalition of groups, is “fiscal responsibility, limited government, and free markets.”
The Independence Caucus questionnaire, which many Tea Party groups use to evaluate candidates, poses 80 questions, most on the proper role of government, tax policy and the federal budgeting process, and virtually none on social issues.
The Contract From America, which is being created Wiki-style by Internet contributors as a manifesto of what “the people” want government to do, also mentions little in the way of social issues, beyond a declaration that parents should be given choice in how to educate their children.
By contrast, the document it aims to improve upon — the Contract With America, which Republicans used to market their successful campaign to win a majority in Congress in 1994 — was prefaced with the promise that the party would lead a Congress that “respects the values and shares the faith of the American family.”
Much More Here:
NYT: ‘Tea party’ avoids divisive issues
I can just see *Tingles* Matthews and his buddy, Keith Olbermann in a small closet getting all up in the air as they *tingle* all over each other before they rushed to the MSNBC website guru to BEG if necessary, in their effort to get a post up that shows the TEA Party in what they perceive to be a bad light!
Tea Party leaders argue that the country can ill afford the discussion about social issues when it is passing on enormous debts to future generations. But the focus is also strategic: leaders think they can attract independent voters if they stay away from divisive issues.
“We should be creating the biggest tent possible around the economic conservative issue,” said Ryan Hecker, the organizer behind the Contract From America.
I realize that most TEA Party members are voting and supporting GOP candidates. What other choice do we have? But we can’t just accept any and all that come walking in and claiming to be Conservative.
The GOP is filled with RINOs, Republicans In Name Only. The TEA Party, in MY opinion, doesn’t need to jump on that band wagon and walk like zombies into THE BIG TENT!
“I think social issues may matter to particular individuals, but at the end of the day, the movement should be agnostic about it. This is a movement that rose largely because of the Republican Party failing to deliver on being representative of the economic conservative ideology.
As the Tea Party pushes to change the Republican Party, the purity they demand of candidates may have more to do with economic conservatism than social conservatism. Some Tea Party groups, for instance, have declined to endorse J. D. Hayworth, who has claimed the mantle of a fiscal conservative, in the Republican Senate primary in Arizona.
But these groups find his record in Congress no more fiscally responsible than the man he seeks to oust, John McCain.
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