"Concise and] elegantly written. . . . A convincing portrait of
the movement's most ardent activists."--"Los Angeles Times"
They burst on the scene at the height of the Great
Recession--thousands of angry voters railing against bailouts and
big government--and within the year, the Tea Party had changed the
terms of debate in Washington. This new populist movement set the
agenda for the 2010 midterm elections, propelling a historic shift
of power in Congress and capturing the mood of an anxious country.
By election day, a remarkable four in ten voters called themselves
Tea Party supporters.
"Boiling Mad" is Kate Zernike's eye-opening look inside the Tea
Party, introducing us to its cast of unlikely activists and the
philosophy and zeal that animate them. She shows how the movement
emerged from an unusual alliance of young, Internet-savvy
conservatives and older people who came to the movement out of fear
and frustration. She takes us behind the scenes as well-connected
groups in Washington move to mobilize the grassroots energy, and
inside the campaign that best showed the movement's power and its
contradictions. Putting the Tea Party in the context of other
conservative revolts, Zernike shows us how the movement reflects
important philosophical and cultural strains that have long been a
feature of American politics.
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