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Title: Beck-Palin Rally in Washington Drawing Supporters of `Babies, Guns, Jesus'
Source: Bloomberg.com
URL Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010- ... ers-of-babies-guns-jesus-.html
Published: Aug 27, 2010
Author: staff
Post Date: 2010-08-27 17:10:53 by buckeroo
Keywords: None
Views: 4688
Comments: 60

Fox News commentator Glenn Beck has a dream about the rally he and Tea Party heroine Sarah Palin plan in front of the Lincoln Memorial tomorrow in Washington: A crowd that organizers say could reach 300,000.

Beck insists that the assembly -- on the same steps where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech exactly 47 years earlier -- isn’t a political rally. Instead, it’s billed as a celebration of the military, patriotism and American heritage.

Organizers got a permit from the National Park Service that says they expect 300,000 people to attend, the Washington Post reported on its Web site. Beck, who will be joined at the event by Palin, the Republican former Alaska governor, sought to limit crowd expectations during his television show yesterday.

“It’s going to be a little overwhelming as we see tens of thousands of people standing together, locked arm-in-arm, peaceful, happy,” he said. “This event is bigger than any single one person; it is not about one person.”

Beck, Palin and allies are feeling empowered by skirmishes their candidates have won in a war against the political establishment. One is playing out in Palin’s home state, where Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski trails a Tea Party rival in a protracted Republican primary vote count.

Alaska Vote

Murkowski, 53, who followed her father into office, is 1,668 votes behind political newcomer Joe Miller, 43, a Gulf War Army veteran endorsed by Palin and Tea Party activists. Thousands of absentee votes are to be counted starting Aug. 31 to determine the winner of the Aug. 24 primary.

Like Beck, Palin is also employed by News Corp.-owned Fox News.

Catherina Wojtowicz, 41, is one of those who traveled to Washington to see Beck and Palin. She arrived in the capital yesterday wearing a T-shirt that carried Palin’s name and “Babies, Guns, Jesus.” The self-employed event organizer from Chicago’s Southwest Side said she wanted to celebrate the Constitution and see Beck in person.

“He talks to you and not at you,” said Wojtowicz, who was meeting in Washington with about 40 members of the Chicago Tea Patriots group. “He’s giving you an education.”

Last September’s “9/12” march in Washington was the first national gathering to demonstrate the size and potential influence of the Tea Party movement.

‘Restoring Honor’

Beck has said tomorrow’s event, titled “Restoring Honor,” isn’t designed to be political or to rally voters ahead of November’s congressional elections. Organizers are discouraging people from bringing signs, and no current officeholders are scheduled to speak.

St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols is scheduled to be honored, and team manager Tony La Russa, who plans to introduce him, said they agreed to appear only after being assured the rally wouldn’t be a political event, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported today on its website.

Still, the rally has been surrounded by political activity.

Representative Jason Chaffetz, a Utah Republican, said he asked people to donate to the event, saying in an interview that it was a “good thing for our country.”

Americans for Prosperity, another Tea Party group, is holding its political action convention in Washington over the weekend and busing people to the rally.

Michele Bachmann

And FreedomWorks, a political organizing group affiliated with the Tea Party, expects 1,600 people to attend its gathering in Washington today. Members will hear lectures by leaders including Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who organized a Tea Party caucus in Congress, and will be briefed on how to organize voters to support conservative candidates.

“We see Glenn Beck as a guy who is bringing revelations of understanding to the American people,” FreedomWorks Chairman Dick Armey, a former congressman from Texas and House majority leader, said in an interview. “Glenn Beck is the instructional arm of the small-government movement and we are the action arm.”

The leader of the House Democratic campaign effort, Maryland Representative Chris Van Hollen, challenged the claim by rally organizers that the event is nonpartisan.

“It’s a blatant political effort,” he told reporters at a Washington press conference today. “You’ve seen Glenn Beck and a lot of the talk show hosts on Fox News out there talking about this election” for 15 months.

Democratic Committee

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee this weekend is organizing an effort to knock on 200,000 doors in the most competitive House districts across the U.S.

Beck’s rally will get competition from the Reverend Al Sharpton and other African-American and civil rights leaders, who will hold their own event tomorrow to commemorate King’s “Dream” speech and focus on improving education equality. It will conclude with a march to the site of a planned King memorial, near Beck’s rally.

Organizers of the Sharpton rally said in a news release that Beck is attempting to “hijack the dream” by pushing for an expansion of states’ rights, “the exact antithesis of the civil rights movement and Dr. King’s legacy.”

“Dr. Martin Luther King would also have been a Beck target,” Jim Wallis, an evangelical author who plans to speak at the Sharpton rally, said in an e-mail fundraising letter to supporters.

“We refuse to let Mr. Beck’s rally cast a dark shadow over the civil rights movement,” said Wallis, president of Sojourners magazine.

‘Genocide’

Beck has said it is a coincidence that his event is taking place on the anniversary of King’s speech. Alveda King, a critic of gay and abortion rights and a niece of King, is scheduled to speak at the rally. At an anti-gay-marriage rally earlier this month in Atlanta, she likened gay marriage to “genocide,” saying that heterosexual marriage guards against “human extinction.”

Last year, Beck said on Fox that President Barack Obama is a “racist” with a “deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture.” He later told CBS’s Katie Couric in an interview that he was “sorry the way it was phrased.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Lisa Lerer in Washington at llerer@bloomberg.net; John McCormick in Washington at jmccormick16@bloomberg.net


Poster Comment:

300,000 to "support our troops?" Give me a break.... get them out of all these wars to support them.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 48.

#17. To: buckeroo (#0)

300,000 to "support our troops?" Give me a break.... get them out of all these wars to support them.

Agreed.

Support Our Troops - Bring Them Home

Alive.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-08-27   19:27:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Original_Intent (#17)

Support Our Troops - Bring Them Home

Alive.

Sarah Palin, a keynote speaker doesn't agree with you.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-08-27   19:30:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: buckeroo (#18)

I would offer a suggestion as to what "The Tits That Walk" can do but this is a family forum - so to speak.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-08-27   19:33:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Original_Intent, Eric Stratton (#19)

Earlier, I attempted to enthuse Eric Stratton about being the official 4um greeter and frank commentator towards the event. He declined because he has so many other tasks to perform.

Would you enjoy the honour of being our official 4um commentator about this event tomorrow? Here is the website: PJTV.com

buckeroo  posted on  2010-08-27   19:40:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: buckeroo (#20)

Earlier, I attempted to enthuse Eric Stratton about being the official 4um greeter and frank commentator towards the event. He declined because he has so many other tasks to perform.

Would you enjoy the honour of being our official 4um commentator about this event tomorrow? Here is the website: PJTV.com

Alas I must decline your gracious invitation and forgo the honor as I have two slow of a connection and am likely to be working.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-08-27   20:59:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: Original_Intent (#31)

Alas I must decline your gracious invitation and forgo the honor as I have two slow of a connection and am likely to be working.

I know you and I have differences on especial topics. But tomorrow you can't miss this epic gathering in Washington DC ... you are about to experience contemporary fascism at its best, here in America by the war party.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-08-27   21:06:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#45. To: buckeroo (#34)

...you can't miss this epic gathering fail in Washington DC ...

There, fixed it.

Original_Intent  posted on  2010-08-27   22:06:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#48. To: Original_Intent (#45)

There, fixed it.

(AP) Sarah Palin has suggested Fox News firebrand Glenn Beck could be someone she'd consider as a running mate if she makes a bid for the White House in two years.

"I can envision a couple of different combinations, if ever I were to be in a position to really even seriously consider running for anything in the future, and I'm not there yet," Palin told the conservative news agency Newsmax as she promoted her memoir, "Going Rogue: An American Life."

"But Glenn Beck I have great respect for. He's a hoot. He gets his message across in such a clever way. And he's so bold - I have to respect that. He calls it like he sees it, and he's very, very, very effective."

Palin and Beck have long been admirers of one another, with the former Alaska governor often praising the Fox News host on her Facebook page. A Palin-Beck ticket would be a dream come true for the legion of so-called tea party protesters vehemently opposed to Barack Obama's presidency.

The pair shares a tendency to strike fear into the hearts of their supporters. Palin, for her part, has alleged Obama is aiming to do away with the elderly and infirm with the so-called death panels in his health-care reform overhaul, while Beck has accused the president of being a racist, a socialist and has also drawn parallels between his policies and those of Adolf Hitler.

The Anti-Defamation League has cited Beck, who also has a syndicated radio show, as the "most important mainstream media figure who has repeatedly helped to stoke the fires of anti-government anger."

Needless to say, it's a potential ticket that has some moderate Republicans squeamish.

"It's not going to happen; it's not anybody's dream," Republican strategist Charles Black, who worked on John McCain's presidential campaign last year, said Wednesday when reached at his D.C. office.

"It's way too early to be focused on it. We don't even know who's going to run."

Palin has been %t about her presidential aspirations as she promotes "Going Rogue" this week, saying that running for president in 2012 is not on her "radar screen right now" while suggesting at the same time it's not beyond the realm of possibility.

But with the media blitz has come fresh criticism from those who helped run McCain's campaign. This time, however, they aren't hiding beyond the cloak of anonymity - they're openly accusing Palin of lying both in her memoir and in her high-profile interviews this week.

Steve Schmidt, McCain's campaign manager, has already dismissed Palin's portrayal of him in "Going Rogue" as "fanciful and total fiction."

And now Nicolle Wallace, another McCain strategist, is bitterly disputing Palin's assertion that she pressured the self-styled hockey mom into her infamous interview with CBS's Katie Couric last fall by telling her the news anchor had low self-esteem.

"The whole notion there was a conversation where I tried to cajole her into a conversation with Katie is fiction," Wallace told MSNBC. "I am not someone who throws around the word 'self-esteem.' It is a fictional description."

She also disputed Palin's insistence that Wallace assured her the interview would be a lightweight one that would simply amount to a conversation between two working mothers and the challenges they faced. Palin's failure to answer Couric's question on what she read every day to her meandering answers on foreign policy caused irreparable damage to the McCain campaign.

In fact, Wallace said, the Couric interview was set up on the day of the United Nations General Assembly in an effort to show Palin had foreign policy savvy.

"It was never made as two working gals," Wallace said. "It's either rationalization or justification or fiction."

McCain himself has denied Palin's allegation in "Going Rogue" that his campaign stuck her with a $50,000 legal bill to pay for the cost of vetting her as a potential vice-presidential candidate.

In fact, the Arizona senator said, the bill was for legal costs pertaining to allegations that Palin made improper use of her influence as Alaska's governor to press for the dismissal of a state trooper named Mike Wooten. Wooten was embroiled in a custody dispute with Palin's younger sister, Molly McCann.

"That was over Troopergate," McCain said earlier this week.

The senator is apparently being hotly pursued by various publishing houses to write a tell-all on Palin, with one publisher reportedly offering him an $8 million advance to dish the dirt.

buckeroo  posted on  2010-08-27   22:13:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 48.

#50. To: buckeroo (#48)

it's a potential ticket that has some moderate Republicans squeamish.

It makes RINO's/conservatives puke, and then they get angry.

hondo68  posted on  2010-08-27 23:04:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 48.

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