Tea Party Marylanders Want Focus on Fiscal Issues
But social issues continue to compete for the spotlight.
By CARL STRAUMSHEIM
Capital News Service
TAMPA, Fla. - Maryland tea party supporters will try to use this week's Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., to shift the focus away from more divisive social issues to their message of fiscal responsibility, conservative leaders said.
But both locally and nationally, social issues continue to compete for the spotlight with the election's top issue: the economy.
At the state level, Maryland tea party groups said they are focusing their efforts on defeating several social issue referendums on the Nov. 6 ballot, including legalizing same-sex marriage and allowing some undocumented immigrants to pay in-state college tuition. On a national level, Rep. Todd Akin, the Republican candidate for Senate in Missouri, reignited the abortion debate with his comments about "legitimate rape."
The Maryland Republican Party is represented at the convention by 72 official delegates and alternates. Among them are party officials and members of the House of Delegates and Senate, but also conservative activists on the state's political scene.
"It's a pretty broad mix of people. The thing they have in common is that they are center-right folks," Delegate Nicholaus Kipke, a Pasadena Republican, said about the Maryland delegation. "There really is no such thing as carrying a tea party membership card."
Members of the Maryland delegation said they intend to show a unified front in Tampa, despite some ideological distance between mainstream Republicans and those who identify with the tea party movement. A recent College of William and Mary report placed the tea party movement on the far right on a liberal-conservative scale.
Todd Eberly, an assistant professor of political science and public policy at St. Mary's College of Maryland, said the rise of the tea party movement has been fueled by current or former Republicans who have grown frustrated with the party.
"It speaks to the larger Republican Party, the growing pressure between its fiscal conservatives and social conservatives," Eberly said. "Republicans -- to win nationally -- need to have both camps come home and vote for them. At the moment what's helping them is the overriding concern of the economy."
Charles Lollar, a tea party Republican, said the delegation is fired up about fiscal issues. Maryland's tea party supporters are less likely to clash with their moderate state colleagues than with their national counterparts, he said.
"I would call it a focus gap," Lollar said. "You'll find conservatives that are so concerned about social issues that they'll take their foot off what's important. Conservatives should be concerned about the fundamentals: Making sure we have a balanced budget and making sure everyone has the opportunity to live within their own means ... The convention will allow this kind of conversation to happen."
Other delegates are less optimistic about their chances to influence policy. Andrew Langer, the president of the Institute for Liberty, a small business advocacy group, said he hoped the convention will serve as a forum for conservatives to exchange ideas on how to limit the cost and size of government and tackle rising health care costs.
"The tea party movement's top issues haven't changed," said Langer, who identifies with the tea party. "Those philosophies hold true for tea party activists here in Maryland."
Langer, who will be attending his fourth convention, said he will also be speaking at two tea party events in Tampa during the convention.
Among conservatives not attending the convention, strengthening the GOP as a minority party in Maryland sits at the top of the agenda.
"I don't want to chase the governor's election. I don't want to chase the Senate election," said Sam Hale, founder of the Maryland Society of Patriots. "We need to rebuild the party. What I'm driving for right now is preparing us for 2014."
A stronger Republican Party would have more power to block "radical legislation" like the social issue referendums on the ballot, Hale said.
Tea party supporters also will spend time in Tampa deciding whether or not to throw their full support behind the Republican ticket, Lollar said.
"The appointment of (presumptive vice presidential nominee Paul) Ryan raises some eyebrows," Lollar said, pointing to Ryan's seven terms in the House of Representatives and the overall ticket's lack of military experience. But the pick does excite the base, he added.
"With Ryan entering the ticket, we have something we can work with," Lollar said. "But am I overly impressed? Am I wowed? Does my jaw drop down to no end? Not exactly."
JoeEldersburg
1:21 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012
The Tea Party may say it's interested in focusing on the economy and jobs, but their actions speak otherwise. Republicans should be vary wary of being infected with their Right Wing agenda. It is the Tea Party's inability to compromise and take it or leave it approach that has stalled any positive gains for our economy and left Congress with a 10% approval rating. As unwitting accomplices to the super wealthy's agenda of lowered taxes and savage cuts to domestic spending (other than defense), they are more than willing to sell out the middle class in the name of "patriotism" and Christianity. The Tea Party is more like an American version of the Taliban wanting to take us back in time.
Jeff Thomas
7:35 am on Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Since the 90's congress has been like a NASCAR race ...it only makes left turns . The tea party is not a party at all ...It is a movement that sprang up overnight when the new administration began the bailouts .
People who had done nothing more than vote in the past were compelled by common sense to do something more . The great awakening of the majority has been attacked by the fundamental transforming left ever since ....
In the true Saul Alynsky style they were called everything from racists to terrorists ...or as our Joe Eldersburg calls us....the "Taliban"
Congress has earned their rating all by themselves ....for failing to represent the people ...for representing the special interests and the lobbyists who bring the campaign $$.
We know the tactics of the left are to follow the Cloward and Piven strategy to overwhelm the free market and our Republic .....google it and see their game plan ...and you decide if continuing to move to the left is the America you want for your family ...not this CC resident
JoeEldersburg
11:10 am on Thursday, August 30, 2012
@Jeff, if the "Tea Party isn't a party at all", why doesn't the movement just go out on its own and leave us more moderate Republicans alone. I'm not left and I don't like to associate with extremists, who believe that we need some fundamentalist spiritual revolution. I don't know who Cloward & Piven are, nor do I have the inclination to find out, as it's probably another Tea Party fantasy conspiracy theory like the UN invasion of Agenda 21,birther stuff or another Glenn Beck theory. I encourage you to check your facts about Congress. The Tea Party's voting as a block within the Republican party has killed any and all compromise on tax and spending policy supported by the leaders of our party (Boehner). The poster boy for Tea Party's extremist behavior is Paul Ryan, so it's a given that we'll hear more of this "trickle-on" fantasy of cutting taxes AND balancing the budget. Romney won't even show us a plan, likely because there isn't one until the rich dictate his agenda to him (after he gets elected). It's truly ugly that super wealthy interests can buy unlimited advertising which completely misrepresents the truth. The Tea Party is merely a fake movement supported by the super rich to facilitate the middle class selling out its own interests in the name of patriotism & Christianity. The Occupy Wall Street movement's motives are ever more genuine and far more bi-partisan than the Tea Party's extremist agenda.
JoAnn Nicholls
9:02 pm on Friday, August 31, 2012
JoeEldersburg a moderate republican....Bwahahahahaha.