books

Tea Party members hold a Tax Day protest. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Teatime: A Wave of Books Anatomizes the Tea Party Movement

The most memorable moment from the first major Tea Party rally in front of New York’s City Hall, in April 2009, wasn’t the woman chain-smoking cigarettes by a guard rail, there, she said, to defend “smoker’s rights.” Nor was it the machismo menace that hung in the air, or the “Don’t Tread on Me” signs held by untrod-upon-looking junior insurance executives in for the afternoon from Glen Cove. It wasn’t even the palpable anger at Mayor Bloomberg, who (presumably) sat in his office a few feet away and, his efforts toward gun control and bike paths notwithstanding, was the only chance Republicans had of holding onto City Hall that November.

No, the most memorable moment of that afternoon was the speaker who took to the microphone and urged everyone present to put down their tricorner hats and give a round of applause to the people who had made the rally happen: the New York City Parks Department, the sanitation workers, the police guarding the barricades.

These were “the working people,” the ones lionized by this movement for the screwing they had been taking from the Obama administration and  assorted powers-that-be, but they were also government workers, their salaries and pensions paid for with hard-earned taxpayer dollars, their very existence dependent upon public largess.

In the two and a half years since that gathering, there have been hundreds like it across the country. In 2010, Tea Party protesters and their ilk not only took out the Democrats in Congress, but even managed to squelch the ambitions of a few Republicans who were deemed insufficiently conservative by the latest right-wing litmus test.

But by late 2011, Glenn Beck, once the Cassandra of this crowd, had been shuffled off the stage. The town hall meetings that first alerted the mainstream media to this new substrata of the body politic are now filled not with conservatives yelling at Democratic congressmen to keep their government hands off of Medicare but with liberals yelling at the Republican reps to let the Bush tax cuts expire. The debt ceiling has been raised, budgets have been passed. The likely Republican presidential nominee is as far removed from this tumult in the streets as the average CEO is from the jobs he outsourced.

Into this breach have slipped a couple of books that attempt to explain this new world we now find ourselves in. Read More

Reality TV

The New Snooki? (Photo via Flickr/Fibonacci Blue)

Could a Tea Party Reality Show Be the Next 'Jersey Shore'?

Doron Ofir, the man responsible for making The Situation and Snooki household names, is casting for his new show. It’s all about politics, but don’t worry, cool kids: it’s a political party. And if you are an outspoken politico whose interests lie in protesting,Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, or the Tea Party, than this might be your chance to shine like the beautiful, unique, and totally reasonable snowflake you are!

Added benefit: Mr. Ofir’s casting site has cool flash animation that turns your cursor into a trail of stars. Just like you!

Read More

Teases

Sarah Palin rocks the mic in Indianola, Iowa.

Palin Keeps It Coy at Tea Party Rally

Former Vice Presidential candidate, Alaska governor and reality TV star Sarah Palin isn’t ready to throw her name in the 2012 presidential race — but she doesn’t want to be taken out of it either. Palin continued to tease the possibility  of a White House run at a Tea Party rally in Indianola, Iowa Saturday. Read More

Disunion

Rangel: Republicans Want to Get Rid of Unions

The way Charlie Rangel interprets the events in Wisconsin, Republicans would like to get rid of unions altogether.

“There’s no question about it,” Rangel told Brother Bill from the Voice of Harlem. “This is not been the first time that we had heard that the Teabag Party–or the Tea Party–rather and some of the Republicans Read More

Politics

Sarah Palin, Meet Judas Priest: A Rogue's Gallery of Cultural Scapegoats

As details emerge about the life of Gabrielle Giffords shooter Jared Loughner–his deranged manifestos, his Salvia habit, the ease with which he acquired a gun–it’s clear that the rhetoric of the Tea Party belongs pretty far down on the list of possible causes (if it belongs there at all). 

Whatever one thinks of Sarah Palin—or Read More

Politics

NYC Tea Partier Thinks the Rhetoric is Coming from the Left

Manhattan Tea Party leader David Webb said that left-leaning media organizations and politicians have been “irresponsible and despicable” in attempting to connect the Arizona shooter to the Tea Party even though they have no evidence.

“[The shooting] had absolutely nothing to do with the Tea Parties or Sarah Palin’s map,” Webb said, referring to the Read More