A Tea Party ManifestoThe movement is not seeking a junior partnership with
the Republican Party. It is aiming for a hostile takeover.

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By DICK ARMEY AND MATT
KIBBE<http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=DICK+ARMEY+AND+MATT+KIBBE&bylinesearch=true>

On Feb. 9, 2009, Mary Rakovich, a recently laid-off automotive engineer, set
out for a convention center in Fort Myers, Fla. with protest signs, a cooler
of water and the courage of her convictions. She felt compelled to act,
having grown increasingly alarmed at the explosion of earmarks, bailouts and
government spending in the waning years of the Bush administration.
President Barack Obama, joined by then-Republican Gov. Charlie Crist, was in
town promoting his plan to spend a trillion dollars in borrowed money to
"stimulate" the economy.

Mary didn't know it, but she was on the front lines of a grass-roots
revolution that was brewing across the nation. More than 3,000 miles away,
Keli Carender, a young Seattle school teacher and a member of a local comedy
improv troupe, was feeling equally frustrated. She started to organize
like-minded citizens. "Our nation's fiscal path is just not sustainable,"
she said. "You can't continue to spend money you don't have indefinitely."

View Full Image
[image: kibbe]
Associated Press

People hold signs and wave flags during the "Uni-Tea" Tea Party rally.
[image: kibbe]
[image: kibbe]

Today the ranks of this citizen rebellion can be counted in the millions.
The rebellion's name derives from the glorious rant of CNBC commentator Rick
Santelli, who in February 2009 called for a new "tea party" from the floor
of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. By doing so he reminded all of us that
America was founded on the revolutionary principle of citizen participation,
citizen activism and the primacy of the individual over the government.
That's the tea party ethos.

The tea party movement has blossomed into a powerful social phenomenon
because it is leaderless—not directed by any one mind, political party or
parochial agenda.

The criteria for membership are straightforward: Stay true to principle even
when it proves inconvenient, be assertive but respectful, add value and
don't taking credit for other people's work. Our community is built on the
Trader Principle: We associate by mutual consent, to further shared goals of
restoring fiscal responsibility and constitutionally limited government.
These were the principles that enabled the Sept. 12, 2009 taxpayer march on
Washington to be one of the largest political protests in the history of our
nation's capital.
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The many branches of the tea party movement have created a virtual
marketplace for new ideas, effective innovations and creative tactics. Best
practices come from the ground up, around kitchen tables, from Facebook
friends, at weekly book clubs, or on Twitter feeds. This is beautiful
chaos—or, as the Nobel Prize-winning economist F.A. Hayek put it,
"spontaneous order."

Decentralization, not top-down hierarchy, is the best way to maximize the
contributions of people and their personal knowledge. Let the leaders be the
activists who have the best knowledge of local personalities and issues. In
the real world, this is common sense. In Washington, D.C., this is
considered radical.

The big-government crowd is drawn to the compulsory nature of centralized
authority. They can't imagine an undirected social order. Someone needs to
be in charge—someone who knows better. Big government is audacious and
conceited.

By definition, government is the means by which citizens are forced to do
that which they would not do voluntarily. Like pay high taxes. Or
redistribute tax dollars to bail out the broken, bloated pension systems of
state government employees. Or purchase, by federal mandate, a
government-defined health-insurance plan that is unaffordable, unnecessary
or unwanted.

For the left, and for today's Democratic Party, every solution to every
perceived problem involves more government—top-down dictates from
bureaucrats presumed to know better what you need. Tea partiers reject this
nanny state philosophy of redistribution and control because it is
bankrupting our country.

While the tea party is not a formal political party, local networks across
the nation have moved beyond protests and turned to more practical matters
of political accountability. Already, particularly in Republican primaries,
fed-up Americans are turning out at the polls to vote out the big spenders.
They are supporting candidates who have signed the Contract From America, a
statement of policy principles generated online by hundreds of thousands of
grass-roots activists.

Published in April, the Contract amounts to a tea party "seal of approval."
It demands fiscal policies that limit government, restrain spending, promote
market reforms in health care—and oppose ObamaCare, tax hikes and
cap-and-trade restrictions that will kill job creation and stunt economic
growth. Candidates who have signed the Contract—including Marco Rubio in
Florida, Mike Lee in Utah and Tim Scott in South Carolina—have defeated
Republican big spenders in primary elections all across the nation.

These young legislative entrepreneurs will shift the balance in the next
Congress, bringing with them a more serious, adult commitment to
responsible, restrained government.

But let us be clear about one thing: The tea party movement is not seeking a
junior partnership with the Republican Party, but a hostile takeover of it.

The American values of individual freedom, fiscal responsibility and limited
government bind the ranks of our movement. That makes the tea party better
than a political party. It is a growing community that can sustain itself
after November, ensuring a better means of holding a new generation of
elected officials accountable.

*Mr. Armey, a former House Republican majority leader, is chairman of
Freedomworks. Mr. Kibbe is president and CEO of Freedomworks. They are the
authors of "Give Us Liberty: A Tea Party Manifesto," out today from
HarperCollins.*

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