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The Tea Party's name was hardly mentioned this election cycle. Are they a spent force? Will they go third-party, or will they be an intra-GOP factor in 2014 like they were in 2010, or will they just fade away?
The Tea Party's name was hardly mentioned this election cycle. Are they a spent force? Will they go third-party, or will they be an intra-GOP factor in 2014 like they were in 2010, or will they just fade away?
The Tea Party's name was hardly mentioned this election cycle. Are they a spent force? Will they go third-party, or will they be an intra-GOP factor in 2014 like they were in 2010, or will they just fade away?
"suicide is painless...it brings on many changes"
The Tea Party's name was hardly mentioned this election cycle. Are they a spent force? Will they go third-party, or will they be an intra-GOP factor in 2014 like they were in 2010, or will they just fade away?
They'll continue to do what they were elected to do.
if only you were successful in your suicide but sadly in just like your career you failed
They'll continue to do what they were elected to do.
Perhaps that's why Romney lost on Tuesday.
But for conservatives who identify with the tea party, one emotion seemed to dominate all others: a white-hot anger at the Republican establishment. Tea party supporters are angry at the GOP for embracing as its presidential nominee a "moderate" like Romney. For undermining "true conservative" candidates. And for "choosing to ignore" the conservative agenda.
Wednesday, the political direct-mail pioneer Richard Viguerie gathered a group of disenchanted conservatives for a news conference in Washington. Calling Romney's loss "the death rattle" of the GOP, Viguerie, chairman of ConservativeHQ.com, said, "The battle to take over the Republican Party begins today."
<snip>
Some tea party activists, stunned by their losses, were not sure how to move forward.
Cincinnati Tea Party President George Brunemann, an engineer, was still reeling Thursday from an election night that also saw Ohio's Republican U.S. Senate candidate, Josh Mandel, lose to Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown.
"I have been trying to come to terms with what the heck is going on," Brunemann said. "The easy two-word answer for what happened Tuesday is: America died."
But he also said there was another casualty: "The words 'tea party' are dead. No doubt about that."
Although the small-government, fiscal-responsibility principles of the tea party will never go out of style, he said, critics of the movement had been successful in tarnishing it as racist.
And the movement got no support from the top during the campaign, he said.
"You never heard a single utterance of the words 'tea party' from Mitt Romney or Paul Ryan," Brunemann said. "I believe the downfall of the Republicans this time was that they never gave credit to the tea party."
Nonsense. The GOP hates the Tea Party as the TP opposes the sort of manic spending RINOs love.
The GOP was seriously embarrassed by the Tea Party, and bought all the BS Obama threw at them. So Romney kept them away from his show and they stayed home last Tuesday.
What the RINOs dont get is, 75% of America is still white. Seventy-five percent is a lot of people. The RINOs arent gonna change their stripes about government spending, they love it as much as the Democrats.
Bottomline is, white people gotta take matters in their own hands, and toss Karl Rove and Ann Coulter and Romney and Obama into the same party. Then they gotta form a party that looks out for white people, and fucks the coloreds.
Even Alice had a Tea party.
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You know Alice intimately too.
Fuck. Off.