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Home » Opinion » Commentary

Monday, August 17, 2009

Beginnings of a revolt

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Public outrage grows over health overreach

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Protesters demonstate against health care reform outside a "town hall" meeting in Pennsylvania.

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By Donald Lambro

Angry "tea party" patriots who launched a nationwide grass-roots rebellion against big, intrusive government, punitive taxes and reckless spending are rallying their troops once again.

Their target is President Obama's government-run health care plan, but this time their ground forces are larger, their goals more ambitious and their potential political impact much greater.

These tea party brigades have been a driving force behind the packed congressional town-hall phenomena that have stunned the Democrats, put the Obama administration on the defensive and sent its health care reform polls into a nose dive.

This is the citizen-led movement that swept the country earlier this year in retaliation to the massive bailout and big spending bills coming out of the Democratic Congress. The seemingly spontaneous turnout at protest rallies throughout the nation has spawned an army of independent, local groups and organizations.

That army is now gearing up to make its voice heard in the battle over the biggest spending bill ever: creation of a new federally run entitlement that will expand the size and cost of government by trillions of dollars and dozens of bureaucracies.

Tea party activists -- conservatives, libertarians, independents and just plain ordinary citizens concerned about their country's direction -- have shunned suggestions to merge themselves into larger organizations, preferring to make their impact felt locally.

And they have effectively done that in this month's town-hall gatherings that have seized the White House's attention and may, in the end, defeat or significantly modify the health care bills now pending in Congress.

But now a Sacramento, Calif.,-based group known as Our Country Deserves Better is gearing up to connect momentarily some of these disparate groups with an ambitious Tea Party Express caravan that will hold 35 rallies in cities and towns from California to Maine.

It will end with a rally in Washington on Sept. 12 -- when Congress is expected to be moving health care legislation through the House and Senate -- a date when many tea party groups had planned to gather here anyway. Their focus: health care legislation that they fear will further rob them of their freedoms and cripple the economy.

"In the past, we have focused on the excessive size of government, and now the debate is about the idea that government is becoming too powerful and making decisions it shouldn't make about people's personal lives, including health care decisons," said Joe Wierzbicki, coordinator of the committee that is planning the cross-country road trip that will begin on Aug. 28.

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