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The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism (Paperback)
Loot Price: R400
Discovery Miles 4 000
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The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism (Paperback)
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Loot Price R400
Discovery Miles 4 000
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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On February 19, 2009, CNBC commentator Rick Santelli delivered a
dramatic rant against Obama administration programs to shore up the
plunging housing market. Invoking the Founding Fathers and
ridiculing "losers" who could not pay their mortgages, Santelli
called for "Tea Party" protests. Over the next two years,
conservative activists took to the streets and airways, built
hundreds of local Tea Party groups, and weighed in with votes and
money to help right-wing Republicans win electoral victories in
2010. In this penetrating new study, Harvard University's Theda
Skocpol and Vanessa Williamson go beyond images of protesters in
Colonial costumes to provide a nuanced portrait of the Tea Party.
What they find is sometimes surprising. Drawing on grassroots
interviews and visits to local meetings in several regions, they
find that older, middle-class Tea Partiers mostly approve of Social
Security, Medicare, and generous benefits for military veterans.
Their opposition to "big government" entails reluctance to pay
taxes to help people viewed as undeserving "freeloaders" -
including immigrants, lower income earners, and the young. At the
national level, Tea Party elites and funders leverage grassroots
energy to further longstanding goals such as tax cuts for the
wealthy, deregulation of business, and privatization of the very
same Social Security and Medicare programs on which many grassroots
Tea Partiers depend. Elites and grassroots are nevertheless united
in hatred of Barack Obama and determination to push the Republican
Party sharply to the right. The Tea Party and the Remaking of
Republican Conservatism combines fine-grained portraits of local
Tea Party members and chapters with an overarching analysis of the
movement's rise, impact, and likely fate.
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