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Is the Tea Party Getting a Little Swift Boatie?
This morning's edition of OneNewsNow (the news service of the Wildmon family's American Family Association) leads with this headline: "New tea party: energy, money -- and detente with GOP."
Reporter Jim Kuhnhenn points out that "Tea party activists and the Republican establishment are quickly joining forces for the fall elections as fresh cash and energy flow to the upstarts."
"Fresh cash" includes a $1 million dollar anonymous contribution to the Tea Party Patriots, and "energy flow" is represented by a renewed commitment by Sal Russo's Tea Party Express to spend hundreds of thousands on advertisement targeting Democrats in Delaware, Alaska and Nevada.
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New tea party: energy, money -- and detente with GOP
JIM KUHNHENN - 9/22/2010 - OneNewsNow
Tea party activists and the Republican establishment are quickly joining forces for the fall elections as fresh cash and energy flow to the upstarts.
Separate tea party groups still squabble over roles for Republican insiders within the movement, but the conservative activists and GOP stalwarts have reached a truce for the common goal of defeating Democrats, heeding calls for unity from Republicans including Sarah Palin.
One group _ the nonprofit Tea Party Patriots _ on Tuesday announced a $1 million donation from an anonymous donor, a shot of cash to be spent before the election on voter mobilization efforts. The Tea Party Express is preparing to assist specific candidates, building on its targeted advertising campaigns during primary races in Delaware, Alaska and Nevada.
Meanwhile, the Republican Party and GOP-allied outside groups are already helping some tea party-backed candidates, most notably Sharron Angle who is seeking to unseat Senate Majority leader Harry Reid in Nevada.
"Ultimately, that's what we all hope happens, as citizens," said Tea Party Patriots co-founder Mark Meckler. "The political parties support the candidates that the people support, not the other way around."
It's hardly unusual for opposing forces to coalesce after primaries to confront the opposition party. But the vigor with which tea party activists went after longtime Republican office holders _ such as Sen. Robert Bennett in Utah and Rep. Mike Castle in Delaware _ had raised the prospects of a rift that would be difficult to heal.
But Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, was offering plenty of salve Tuesday.
The entire OneNewsNow piece can be found @
http://www.onenewsnow.com/Politics/Default.aspx?id=1176226
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