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Small-town rally shows true meaning of tea parties

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
April 16, 2009

Tea party tax protesters gather in Winchester, Virginia. (Examiner photo/Byron York)

WINCHESTER, VA. — If you listened to the speeches at the Tax Day tea party held in the courthouse square of this northern Virginia town, population 25,733, you might not have caught the name of the man in the White House.  Among many denunciations of high taxes and out-of-control government spending, there were just a couple of mentions of Barack Obama -- one when a local activist criticized the administration's cap-and-trade energy plan, and the other when a city businessman said he prays for the president.

"This is absolutely not an Obama thing," James See, a painting contractor, told me as we stood in a cold drizzle waiting for the mid-day rally to begin.  "The president is under a tremendous amount of strain and pressure. People had their time to choose who they wanted to be president.  President Obama is our president, and we have to live under that, whether we agree with all of his policies or not."  The tea party, See said, was intended to send Washington a simple message: "We're out here."

A number of other people told me much the same thing.  "This is a government thing," Ben Burkhart, a retired police officer, said. "It's a Congress thing," said Ken Hersh, a painting and maintenance contractor. "To me, it's a liberal Congress thing," added Butch Kuykendall, a retired school teacher. Kuykendall thought a moment and added, "But the Republicans haven't always been too good.." "They're horrible," chimed in Kuykendall's friend James Spangler, an insurance agent.

A number of press reports have characterized the tea parties as anti-Obama exercises. The Wall Street Journal carried an online story headlined "Anti-Obama 'Tea Party' Protests Mark Tax Day." CNN introduced a tea-party story by saying, "This is a party for Obama-bashers."  The Los Angeles Times ran a column headlined, "Anti-Obama Taxpayer Tea Parties Steeped in Insanity."  But in Winchester at least, the atmosphere was not so much anti-Obama -- organizers posted a note on their website asking that everyone "Please DO NOT personally attack the President or any member of Congress by name" -- as it was a classic conservative Republican, limited-government, anti-spending talkfest.  Anyone who covered the GOP primary contests in 2007-2008 would have recognized it immediately.

At those gatherings, as now, Republicans complained of runaway federal spending.  They didn't want to bash George W. Bush -- they were too grateful for his efforts in the War on Terror to do that -- but they blamed the then-president, as well as Republicans in Congress, for failing to rein in federal spending.  And on spending at least, they heard what they wanted from John McCain and voted for him, even though many disliked the party nominee for a variety of other reasons.

Looking back, the way a lot of them see it is that Bush laid the foundation for worse things to follow.  "It started with the Republicans and with Bush," James Spangler, the insurance agent, told me.  "I mean, I'm a George Bush guy, but it started with him at the end, with Bernanke and Paulson -- those guys screwed up big time, and they opened the door for those people who are in there now to just go crazy, which is what they're doing."

Now, deficits that troubled them a few years ago have tripled.  The $787 billion stimulus bill, in particular, bothered everyone here -- not just the spending, but how it was rushed through Congress by a secretive Democratic leadership before anyone in the general public had a chance to examine it.  (One child here carried a sign that said READ B4 U SIGN!) The projected $1.8 trillion deficit for 2009 simply blows their mind.  And then there is the old-fashioned stuff.  A number of people were aware of a new report by Citizens Against Government Waste naming Mississippi Republican Sen. Thad Cochran as the Congress' most prolific earmarker, with $653 million in park-barrel projects for his state.  "I heard about Thad Cochran, and it was really upsetting to me," homemaker Cheryl Lancaster told me, "because I always thought it was more Democrat than Republican.  But honestly, it's both of them."

And thus the tea parties. This rally, which about 300 people braved the rain, wind, and 45-degree temperatures to attend, was a small-town, homemade affair.  There were no Washington activists, no Fox News stars, nobody from outside the local area.  It began with the Pledge of Allegiance and a capella renditions of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" and "America the Beautiful."  It ended with "God Bless America." There were lots flags and patriotism and quotations from the Founding Fathers.

This is not a rich place. According to the census, the median household income in Winchester is $44,808, significantly less than the statewide Virginia median of $59,575, a number that includes the affluent suburbs of Washington.  Less than one in four adults here has a bachelor's degree or higher.  And with the economic downturn, particularly in the housing business, many are in rough situations.

"I started out with three or four workers, and it's down to me," Ken Hersh, the painting contractor, told me. "I had my sons working with me.  It's bad when you have to tell your sons to find another job."

"You laid off your sons?"

"I laid off my sons.  That's bad."

Cheryl Lancaster, the homemaker, told me her husband "sells evil corporate jets."  She explained that his job gave her a different perspective on the populist outcry against corporate CEOs and their private planes. "You know how a lot of companies were getting slammed on that, but I think of all the people the jet companies employed," she said.

You can think what you like of the tea parties, and the media coverage of the tea parties, across the country.  Here in Winchester, Tax Day was a serious and well-meaning affair.  For the people here, there are principles at stake in this fight, and, as much as they can, they intend to stand up for what they believe.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

BetseyRoss

Apr 16, 2009

Thank you for doing this excellent article on the Winchester Tea Party. You captured the spirit of it perfectly. A reporter who does his job well. What a concept! All of us in Winchester appreciate it.

 

JD

Apr 16, 2009

Companies are having TARP money forced down their throats and in turn controlled by government. My children will inherit some $15T of debt. The ACORNS... are being funded beyond imagination. TEA PARTIES ARE ABOUT TOO MUCH SPENDING. They are against funding anti-freedom aspects of our society intended to negate our republic.

 

Meredith

Apr 16, 2009

Although I am an Obama supporter, I am very worried about the high level of "bailout" spending, which began under the Republicans and continues now. But what else could the president do, given the economic mess which WE as a country created. Protests aside, what PLAN have the Republicans offered to the president that is a counterbalance to all the spending? Nothing whatsoever. Protests are fine, but unless you have an alternative to a mess which was created largely from 2000-2008, you're just throwing teabags around for someone to clean up. I welcome the Republican party to go back to its FISCAL CONSERVATIVE roots (leave theology out of it) and give the country two choices instead of only one.

 

DCB

Apr 16, 2009

Well done. I am a Northern Va resident and attended the DC rally. My experience was the same. Hard-working, well-meaning people that don't want to see this country become socialist, don't want to saddle our children with extraordinary debt and don't want government involving itself in private industry. I always vote, but this was my first rally...but on this topic not the last. Listen Up Congress!

 

ScottO

Apr 16, 2009

"And on spending at least, they heard what they wanted from John McCain" Not true. I never heard him say he was going to spend less. I only heard him say he was going to spend it on different things. Instead of Chicago projects, it would go to Michigan projects, etc.

 

utlahis

Apr 16, 2009

Thanks for showing us as concerned well behaved citizens. Bush got booed big time too because we know it is all politicans and not just the democrats. It was a non partisan rally and too bad for the ultra liberals who have misrepresented the rallies - their children will be saddled with this debt too but must be they have plenty of money to spare.

 

humdinger

Apr 16, 2009

Thanks Byron for a great article. My husband, father and I attended the Tea Party in Charleston, WV in the same crappy weather, along with another 300. The MSM has tried very hard to portray this as a Republican schill, but they obviously didn't do their work. If any one party was prominent, it was Libertarian. No wonder the ratings and the subscriptions continue to drop.

 

Radical Whig

Apr 16, 2009

The tea parties were for "no legislation without representation." We are not being represented in Congress when left-wing bills are jammed down our throats with the opposition patry getting to make any statements on the floor, and the bill not even being read into the record. This is attrocious, and is what most Americans were protesting against. We do not want a totalitarian dictattorship, especially a left-wing one!! Please see the Radical Whig at www.radicalwhig.org/

 

Kathleen

Apr 16, 2009

Mr. York, we need more real journalists like you. It's not just those in Winchester, VA who appreciate your coverage - this is a wonderful, uplifting article and we thank you.

 

XKarenX

Apr 16, 2009

This is the best report I have seen on a "tea party" gathering bar none. Byron York is arguably the best journalist working in America today.

 

SeattleLiberal

Apr 16, 2009

What a pathetic turnout for a FoxNoise marketed event. Only 250K people nationwide turned out for this so called TaxTeaParty. That is less than one tenth of one percent of the population of this great country. When is one tenth of one percent of a population important? NEVER!

 

retired military

Apr 16, 2009

"What a pathetic turnout for a FoxNoise marketed event. Only 250K people nationwide turned out for this so called TaxTeaParty. That is less than one tenth of one percent of the population of this great country. When is one tenth of one percent of a population important? NEVER!" " When was the last time an antiwar rally had 250k people show up? A cindy Sheehan rally? a proabortion rally? The answer is NEVER. And last time I checked Bush won by like 500 votes in 2000. That is less than .00001 percent of the population of the US.

 

Kelly

Apr 16, 2009

Oh, for God's sake. We're in a recession--The federal government has cut taxes and increased spending--That's what ALL national governments do in a recession. That's because its the ONLY WAY OUT OF A RECESSION. This is WHY THERE IS A MARKET FOR GOVERNMENTAL SECURITIES. Would you anti-tax nuts freaking take an economics class? This is so stupid.

 

republican999

Apr 16, 2009

If these protests become a tax-revolt, say a few million people who refuse to pay their income taxes, then they could cause enormous changes. It could mean that the Federal government's tax system (based pretty much on voluntary compliance) would become untenable. It could mean the end of the income tax.

 

don

Apr 16, 2009

Just what principle is at stake? Taxes? No. These people are, for the huge part, getting back tax bucks this month. What about the future? President Obama's is the first one to have a real plan to cut the debt, unlike Reagan and Bush. They don't like job loss? Guess who caused that? Republican tax and spend policies, unregulated capitalism. The Tea parties were in response to right-wing radio and tv. Don't they just hate losing power and being wrong.

 

don

Apr 16, 2009

Just what principle is at stake? Taxes? No. These people are, for the huge part, getting back tax bucks this month. What about the future? President Obama's is the first one to have a real plan to cut the debt, unlike Reagan and Bush. They don't like job loss? Guess who caused that? Republican tax and spend policies, unregulated capitalism. The Tea parties were in response to right-wing radio and tv. Don't they just hate losing power and being wrong.

 

FVazquez

Apr 16, 2009

Your article is journalism at its best. I went to the Pittsburgh Pa Party on Wed. The issue was anger at the deficit not taxes or Obama. No politicians spoke. Our local paper the Pittsburgh Post gazette didn't even cover it. The planners figured a couple hundred but over 1,000 showed up in cold rain. Last Saturday about 4,500 showed up for an earlier party. I was very upset with the WSJ they turned it into an Obama story.

 

SteveO

Apr 16, 2009

Meredith, you must not be paying attention, or maybe the Conseratives aren't communicating as well as they should, but there are alternate plans out there. Look at what Paul Ryan, Gingrich, Perry, et al are offering. If that fails look at the real world results of how the states are faring in this crisis. The red states, Texas for one, are doing much better then the blue states, Calif. NY, etc. If you want to see your future look how borrowing your way to prosperity has worked as policy. The Tea Parties just show that slowly America is realizing that spending is not investment, bailouts mask symptoms and Big Government insidiously takes your freedom, all the while making you feel "secure".

 

M Lyster

Apr 16, 2009

Well done, and well covered. At least some outlets haven't adopted CNN's 'smear and deride' approach to what was, and will be, a meaningful issue in the debate. As a conservative I'm sorely disappointed with both parties---but far more concerned by the irresponsible, profligate spending plans put forth this year with neither measurable goals nor roadmaps to get there. The liberal intelligentsia should take no solace in the absence of a 'big name' leader of the Tea Party movement: rather, they should take note that it rose up from every corner of the nation, some of them actively shunning RNC participation.

 

harley2002

Apr 16, 2009

Less than one in four adults here has a Why is kind of sentence always put in an article like this? Is it meant to show that people without college degree's are somehow less intelligent then people that have them? Let me remind you Gates never finished college and Ross Pero never finished college. In fact Edison did not go to college. And I have worked with people that have degrees that are dumb as posts. By the way I did not finish college and have been hired more then once over someone with a degree. The sheepskin does not make you smart it just shows you know how to pass a test and suck up to leftist Professors.

 

Cameron

Apr 16, 2009

We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore.

 

Seeryer

Apr 16, 2009

The spirit of this rally and all rallies across America was SOUR GRAPES. Pure and simple. Conservatives have felt awful about themselves and the country since NOV '08 and yesterday served as a pep rally that basically said, "Yeah we lost but we don't care, Liberals are socialists and fscists". What a friggin joke conservatism is in 2009. Please continue to be right wing but feel free to refrain from becaoming an extremist. If a liberal killed alomost 200 Americans blowing up a building to protest the expansion of government under Bush the right wingers would have demanded Daily Kos be shut down but when it is a right winger who does these things and the government releases a report weeks before the 14th anniversary of McVeigh conservatives act like they re the targets. Maybe you are if you plan on blowing up government buildings or killing three cops who knock on your door. Paranoid losers. Love it or leave it. USA. USA. USA

 

RadicalWhig

Apr 16, 2009

Jimmah Chatah tried to tax our way out of a recession. John F Kennedy was an intelligent lefty (usually an oxymoron) and so he CUT taxes to stimulate the economy. Kennedy was bright and his plan worked. Cahtah was an imbecile and his plan failed. Now we have B-Ho, and it's "Welcome Back Carter" http://www.radicalwhig.org/

 

sohiu

Apr 16, 2009

the tea party's are all about obama being totally out of control and the congress we will never dig out of this....the one I attended I checked as they came in 5,000 democrats were there. HELLO

 

sohiu

Apr 16, 2009

the tea party's are all about obama being totally out of control and the congress we will never dig out of this....the one I attended I checked as they came in 5,000 democrats were there. HELLOand I am one of them

 

sohiu

Apr 16, 2009

the tea party's are all about obama being totally out of control and the congress we will never dig out of this....the one I attended I checked as they came in 5,000 democrats were there. HELLOand I am one of them

 

Cygnet

Apr 16, 2009

Thanks for the gentle, sensitive article, that will probably lead to fewer rants than usual. I share the concern of many that the Administration's massive budget with the resulting deficits both near-term and down-the-road, will do to the economy experienced by our children and grandchildren. I know that President Bush did not attempt to rein in spending over the last four years, but I am concerned that with President Obama, there will be no reins at all!

 

Pat in VT

Apr 16, 2009

Excellent article! It's nice to know that there are still some hard working reporters out there doing their job!

 

Pat in VT

Apr 16, 2009

Excellent article! It's nice to know that there are still some hard working reporters out there doing their job!

 

SteveO

Apr 16, 2009

When is one tenth of one percent important? When one tenth of one percent of the population of what was to become this great country decided it wanted freedom from tyranny sometime around, oh 1760. Never say never...

 

MN

Apr 16, 2009

Today, I read that the Obama Administration/Homeland Security is concerned about the terror potential of right wing extremists and military veterans..........

 

mancha

Apr 16, 2009

It is pathetic to see the outrage jus 2 month afte te election of Bary the Kenyan Saetoro was electd.I always suspeced that Americans are realy stupid.As an African immigrant,I saw nothing in Obama.The majoriy here in america saw soething!Well deal with him.

 

Linda Rork

Apr 17, 2009

With the Liberal Elites in charge of most of the MSM, it seems they don't believe there are Americans with minds of their own and the ability to express themselves. Hurray for the TeaParty-goers!

 

yoodles

Apr 17, 2009

You know you are being effective when they attempt to minimize your impact and marginalize the people associated with it. Everyone knows this was huge yesterday, unprecedented, and only going to get bigger. I am proud of my fellow Americans! Let's roll!

 

Ken Hersh

Apr 17, 2009

Mr. York, as one of my quotes was used in your article, I would like to clear up some peoples misconceptions. Most of the people at the Winchester,Va. rally were not disgruntled RICH people, most of us were people trying to keep our heads above water. As a MODERATE Republican the reasons I went was the runaway Congress and spending. I hope some of them read your column , maybe they'll get the message. 1st Tuesday in November this year,next year and every year.

 

cph

Apr 19, 2009

Meredith- Good post. I agree; Bush got it going and Obama is multiplying the mess. There were alternatives: 1.) Suspend payroll taxes for 1 year. This would give every working family a 7% raise to pay down debts or whatever and would also give their employer 7% to reduce layoffs. Cost - $600B 2.) Eliminate penalties and taxes from 401k withdrawls to pay down a mortgage. To help homeowners avoid forclosure and the need for bank bail-outs. Cost - lost taxes. 3.) Direct grants to States to help the unemployed. Cost - $100b. There were/are alternatives that directly help working Americans w/o driving up National Debt.

 

SporkLift Driver

Apr 19, 2009

Wow a few koolaid drinkers here. Don: I love Obama'as plan to balance the budget -- Push the deficit through the roof and hope the next guy bites the bullet and clean up the mess. Seeryer: What color is the sky in your world? Retired military: Do you really think that 250,000 figure is crebible? When little towns that didn't even make the list of 800 or so tea parties break the 1000 mark? When more of 800 or so broke the 2000 mark than fell below 1000? Why believe anything from an innumerate and biased mainstream press?

 

SporkLift Driver

Apr 19, 2009

Stupid comments deleted my line breaks.

 

Concerned

May 8, 2009

Change in our country usually begins at the grass roots level (i.e., little towns). Hopefully, next year we'll see an even bigger turn-out to participate in Tea Parties all over the country. If so, then I would expect to see a more organized movement start to spring up and eventually maybe some change can be brought about.
The first thing we need to do, in my humble opinion, is to enact some term limits for all members of congress.

 

Jan 11, 2010

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plazma kiralama
Projeksiyon Kiralama
Led ekran Kiralama
Simultane
Ses sistemi kiralama

 


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