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5:27 pm CST - December 17, 2009
Posted under The Scoop
Conservatives Positioning, Grab for TEA-Party Cash
By Kenneth P. Vogel
Conservative leaders are eager to turn Tea Party anger into election-year cash – and to do that, they’re launching a flurry of new political action committees aimed at collecting small-dollar donations from newly engaged anti-tax, anti-spending activists. The latest entrant: Take Back America PAC, to be launched this week by FreedomWorks, the conservative group and Tea Party leader run by former House Republican leader Dick Armey. Armey said the goal of the new PAC is “to show that if Republicans pick their candidates with a message of restraint of big government and respect for individual liberty, it will translate into electoral success. If they don’t do that, they will probably get what I will call ‘gentle reminders’ from all of the grassroots activists in their districts that they need to be a lot more like Reagan Republicans or they can expect that they might lose their own primary.”
The PAC, which plans to support conservative Republicans Marco Rubio and Pat Toomey in Senate primaries in Florida and Pennsylvania, respectively, is also considering supporting Rand Paul’s GOP Senate campaign in Kentucky — and opposing the reelection bids of Democratic Sens. Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, in Nevada and Chris Dodd in Connecticut.
When Take America Back sends out its first fundraising email this week to FreedomWorks’ 415,000 online members, it will join a crowded and growing field of campaign vehicles vying for Tea Partiers’ donations.
The Liberty First PAC was officially launched last week by early Tea Party organizer Eric Odom.
GrassRootsPAC, a new project organized partly by the president of the Tea Party-linked American Majority organizing group, is planning a hard rollout next year.
And the California-based Our Country Deserves Better PAC–TeaPartyExpress.org, added the “TeaPartyExpress.org” to its name in October after raking in big bucks for an eponymous cross-country bus tour.
The common goal of the groups is to transform the Tea Party movement into something of a conservative answer to MoveOn.org, a mechanism for bringing in huge numbers of small checks to help elect small-government fiscal conservatives and to defeat incumbents supportive of the big-money initiatives pushed by President Obama and his allies in the Democratic Congress.
But the sudden emergence of so many groups has raised concerns among activists about dissipating the energy behind the already fractured Tea Party movement, and has buoyed Democratic hopes that the Tea Party movement will spark a Republican civil war, resulting in bloody primaries that will leave the GOP limping into the 2010 midterm elections with damaged or fringe candidates.
Armey dismissed suggestions of an “internecine conflict within the Republican Party” as “simply inaccurate. That’s like saying that Methodists who disagree with Presbyterians are fomenting a war inside the Presbyterian Church.”
But the Methodists never had an army quite like this.
On Monday evening, the grassroots umbrella group Tea Party Patriots is set to hold a conference call with local organizers across the country to discuss plans to form its own PAC, while the upstart Tea Party Nation, a for-profit company, intends to use any profits it generates from the national Tea Party convention it’s organizing in February to fund a so-called 527 organization that would air ads supporting candidates who embrace the movement’s ideals.
“It’s time for the tea party movement to start flexing its muscle in the electoral process,” Odom said in announcing the launch of Liberty First, which he said collected $11,500 in its first week of fundraising, and has accepted pledges for another $98,000. He predicted that his PAC could raise upwards of $500,000 for
the 2010 Congressional midterms by collecting contributions of $100 or less from the hundreds of thousands of activists who turned out for April 15 Tax Day Tea Parties around the country, which he helped organize.
“A lot of these Tea Partiers are saying they want political change,” said Ned Ryun, president of American Majority and a leader of GrassRootsPAC. “And what we’re saying is if you’re going to make political change, you’re going to have to give political money. You need money to win.”
But Judson Phillips, president of Tea Party Nation, acknowledged there’s some disagreement among activists about whether raising money for candidates runs afoul of the issue-based focus that spurred the movement, which to some extent arose as a backlash to Obama’s healthcare reform plans.
“If the Tea Party movement is only about doing protests, going out having our rallies, then the movement has failed,” he said. “The only way the Tea Party movement is going to be successful in 2010 is if we are able to get out there and elect good officeholders to replace the bad ones we have in there.,” he said, adding “the simple fact of the matter is that if you are not going to get candidates elected without money.”
But Erick Erickson, editor of the influential conservative blog RedState.com, said he’s “skeptical of a lot of the operations being set up so quickly. It seems like there are so many groups all of a sudden, I’m having trouble keeping track of who’s who.”
Though he’s advising GrassRootsPAC, he said he tells many would-be donors to give their money to more established conservative groups, including the Club for Growth and the Senate Conservatives Fund, a leadership PAC chaired by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), a Tea Party darling.
DeMint’s fund and SarahPAC, a leadership fund headed by former Alaska governor – and fellow movement favorite – Sarah Palin, have benefitted from their standing with Tea Partiers.
DeMint’s group had raised $1.1 million this year through the end of October, though it’s tougher to quantify the impact of the movement on Palin’s PAC and the others mentioned in this report, since they won’t be required to report their hauls
for the second half of this year until January.
Erickson, whose blog has both chronicled and helped guide the Tea Party movement, said next year’s elections will be critical in determining which of the new groups will have staying power.
“I am going to sit back and watch these groups shape up and not advise anyone to give them money until they’ve actually gone through an election cycle,” he said.











7 Comments
CWJensen
6:56 pm CST
December 17, 2009
You can and should mail a check right to the individual you have researched.
I send Joe Wilson a check within 2 hours of the time the words you lie came out of his mouth.
I have NOT sent him a dime since I discovered He is sharing with the PARTY.
Since that time I have researched and supported a dozen individuals in their primary battles against incumbents.
If you send a contribution using your credit card by e mail the solicitor program gets a minimum of
seven percent.
I URGE all Patriots to remember it will be individuals NOT parties or organizations that SAVE America.
If we are going to KILL the SNAKE you have CUT the HEAD off.
J Coble
8:42 pm CST
December 17, 2009
Damn CWJ; That’s the Exact same words I Emailed to GLENN BECK yesterday..I’m not looking at any party. I’m looking for a GOD Fearing Pateriot to step foward………..
Dot
11:25 pm CST
December 17, 2009
You know, I’m really disgusted by these groups. They do not trickle funds down to local tea parties, they ask for donations but never tell people to support their local tea parties too. DO NOT GIVE to large groups, please DO give to individual tea parties, 9/12 groups, or directly to candidates. NOT national groups. They are no better than the GOP.
JED
12:14 am CST
December 17, 2009
Yes CW I agree with you…look and donate at the individual. I think CW has posted on here before about “The Patriot Post”. I found the todays post very good: http://patriotpost.us/alexander/2009/12/17/the-time-has-come/
We can ‘t let our guard down. I feel the next few years will be detrimental to all of us. We need to forge on with every idea we have to get these people out of the control of our lives. God Bless us all!
SJK
12:21 pm CST
December 17, 2009
I have been following CW’s lead on sending checks to “individuals” and not party! These days that is the right and only thing to do! Only support people financially that you have researched and know to be true conservatives! Support those we can trust that will stand by their principles, serve their constituents, state and country, and not their own self interests, and say what they mean and mean what they say! No more, as CW so eloquently put it……RETREAD-LI-CANTS!
Teresa
8:31 pm CST
December 17, 2009
Let’s all urge our STATE legislature and Governor to support the following three constitutional amendments (or something similar):
1. A state constitutional amendment that requires the state legislature and senate to approve and adopt all un-enumerated federal legislation and regulations by a 2/3 majority vote. If it doesn’t get approved and adopted, Texas will not comply or contribute tax money for that federal law.
2. A state constitutional amendment that requires, prior to consideration of No. 1 listed above, a complete, transparent and comprehensive cost/benefit study in order to make known the positive or negative effects on the wealth, property, and freedom of Texas’ citizens.
3. In order to establish the legitimacy of enumerated federal spending, a state constitutional amendment that requires a transparent, complete and comprehensive annual financial audit of the Federal Government, including the Federal Reserve, in order to clearly establish to the citizens of Texas that their taxes are being Constitutionally procured and spent. Should the Federal Government (including Federal Courts) and Federal Reserve refuse to fully cooperate, it is the sole prerogative of the State of Texas to deny payments, in full or in part, to the Government until satisfaction has been achieved.
These three items will return true governing authority to Texas where it belongs, and will require all special interest groups to come physically to Texas to ask for our money.
Christian Archer
11:00 am CST
December 17, 2009
Teresa, I thoroughly enjoy your postings. You have some government savvy that is very helpful to us all. I wrote a letter to Rick Perry asking him to call a special session of the Texas Legislature. I asked him to encourage our Texas legislaturers to pass a bill that would nullify all that the Federal government is doing with regards to health care. I remined him that we have the right to opt out as a state according to the tenth amendment of the U.S. constitution.
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