Tea Party Group Wants To Send Occupy Wall Street A Message
Don Adams, Co-founder of Liberate America, is organizing a “BUYcott” to counteract an Occupy Wall Street-led boycott planned for Black Friday. (0:19)
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Don Adams, Co-founder of Liberate America, is organizing a “BUYcott” to counteract an Occupy Wall Street-led boycott planned for Black Friday. (0:19)
Don Adams of the conservative group Liberate America believes a Black Friday boycott would actually hurt “the little guy,” and argues that the planned boycott by Occupy Wall Street organizers will do more damage than good. (0:08)
“The death of any negotiations that will lead to higher taxes on the financially strapped American people is a clear victory,” says Brent Bozell, Chairman of ForAmerica. (0:16)
“They will be out next November,” says Brent Bozell, Chairman of ForAmerica. He predicts that Republicans will meet the same fate as President George H.W. Bush if they support tax increases. (0:09)
David Bozette, Chairman of ForAmerica, applauded the Republican members of the super committee for not caving on tax increases. (0:16)
At a “Jobs, Not Cuts” rally Wednesday, Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) plays down comparisons suggesting the Occupy Wall Street movement will spark the creation of a new political party. (0:40)
Jaime Herrera, the Republican Congresswoman-elect for Washinton’s 3rd Congressional district, told reporters Monday morning that the tea party is the “breath of fresh air” that Congress needs. (0:20)
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), who will likely be the next Speaker of the House, says that the Tea Party and the Republican party can work together to cut spending and spur job growth. (0:21)
Terry McAuliffe, former Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, feels the policies of the Tea Party were enough to get them through the primaries but will not hold them up in the midterm elections. (0:37)
Graham Hueber, a senior researcher for the Opinion Research Center, says that 27 percent of surveyed tea party members consider climate change an issue as opposed to 62 percent of independents. (0:11)
Wendy Weiser, director of Voting Rights and Elections Project at the Brennan Center for Justice describes the new role the Tea Party will play at the polls in the upcoming November elections. (0:22)
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), Chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, accuses the Democrats of using the Tea Party movement to distract the American public from their unpopular legislation. (0:44)
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs says there is a “vociferous” debate going on within the Republican Party. (0:45)
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) says that is hard to differentiate Republicans from Tea Party members by studying their voting records. (1:04)
Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) says the Tea Party and Republicans’ agenda is retrograde and reactionary and adds that Democrats are going to put up a fight in the midterm Congressional election in November. (1:03)