Four years ago, CNBC’s Rick Santelli went into an angry tirade on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade in which he called for a tea party resurgence. “We’re thinking of having a Chicago tea party in July,” he said. “All you capitalists that want to show up to Lake Michigan, I’m going to start organizing.”
Santelli’s rant turned out to be more talk than action, but it helped give birth to the Tea Party groups that grew in 2009 and took over the Republican primary process 2010.
Today, the tea is weaker, but refusing to back down despite the strongest efforts from the GOP establishment and even the rejection from voters. A recent poll found only three in ten Americans have a favorable view of the Tea Party, and half of all respondents saying they have a negative view of the party. The number who consider themselves tea party members? Down to only 8%.
GOP mastermind Karl Rove has even launched his own superPAC, the Conservative Victory Project, to help take down the “Christine O’Donnell’s” of the party.
But on this fourth anniversary of the “spark” that launched the movement, the tea party big wigs seem unwilling to cede their claim on the Republican party.
The Tea Party Patriots released a fundraising letter just today using Rove’s image and his recent attacks to inspire donors to contribute to their new campaigns. “Over just that last few weeks “Republicans” like Rove have called Tea Party members ‘racists,’ ‘bigots,’ ‘paranoid’ and even political ‘underbrush.’”








