Politics

Republican Party Vetting Scott Website

Tea partiers grumble as content is reviewed for 'balance'
By: Kenric Ward | Posted: March 17, 2011 3:55 AM
Up briefly, a website on which Gov. Rick Scott hailed the work of tea party activists has been taken down by the Republican Party of Florida.

"The site was launched prematurely without final content and legal review from the party," said RPOF spokesman Trey Stapleton.

"We have been coordinating with the governor and he agreed with Chairman [Dave Bitner's] decision to pull the site until the review process is complete."

The up-and-down episode raised the hackles of hypersensitive tea partiers who suspect that the GOP took the site offline because Scott wasn't sufficiently deferential to Republican lawmakers.

On the site -- RickScottForFlorida.com -- the governor called on Floridians to urge their legislators to pass his budget.

A suggested e-mail read: "Please join with the majority of Floridians who denounce the out-of-control spending that is happening in Washington and in Tallahassee."

Scott's office on Wednesday directed Sunshine State News' questions to the RPOF, noting that the party funded the site.

Meanwhile, an undercurrent of discontent and distrust continues to churn among some tea party members who express increasing frustration with the state Republican Party.

Patricia Sullivan, head of the Tea Party Network, a coalition of 58 tea groups around the state, said she took notice of a recent RPOF press release tweaking Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson and the two-year anniversary of the failed federal stimulus program.

"I wrote an e-mail saying, 'That's nice. When are you going to issue a statement about [Republican] Congressman John Mica [plumping for the high-speed rail project]?'"

"I never got a response," Sullivan said.

The RPOF was similarly mum during the intra-party squabble that followed Scott's rejection of federal high-speed rail funding. A dozen GOP state senators signed a letter asking the Obama administration to give the state another chance at the money, and Scott was subsequently challenged by one of those senators, Thad Altman, who joined with a Democrat to sue Scott at the Florida Supreme Court. 

In contrast to those prickly relations, Scott has had warm ties to the tea party movement since his insurgent primary challenge to establishment Republican Bill McCollum.

Tea groups -- including the Florida TEA [Taxed Enough Already] Party, which has been sued unsuccessfully over its use of the "tea" name -- helped to energize the conservative base and propel Scott to a narrow victory over Democrat Alex Sink last November.

Still smarting from McCollum's defeat, some old-guard Republicans remain distant, if not dismissive, of tea partiers they consider ideological rabble-rousers.

At the RPOF's winter meeting in Orlando, only one candidate for party chairman even mentioned the tea party in the final speeches.

Joe Gruters got no applause when he called on delegates to reach out to "tea party and 9/12 groups." The Sarasota County Republican chairman, who had been singled out for praise by Scott during the campaign, finished a distant third in a five-person field.

RPOF's Stapleton downplayed any political friction and dismissed any conspiracy theories regarding the website.

"We're in constant communication with the governor. There was just a glitch in the process," he said.

Stapleton said he could not say who authored the content of the site. "I don't know how it was put together. But the site has to be balanced," he stated.

When will it be back up?

"There's no time frame. As soon as possible. We'll all agree on the content before it's relaunched."

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Contact Kenric Ward at kward@sunshinestatenews.com or (772) 801-5341.

Comments (13)

Conrad Fitzhume
9:41AM MAR 19TH 2011
I've been a faithful member of the Republican Party and a patriotic, hard working member of the middle class for 34 years. It has become painfully clear to me that the GOP definitely does not represent the interests of the middle class American worker (union or non-union, public or private sector). The GOP agenda is clear: take away everything that middle class workers have EARNED and use it to pay for more tax exemptions / breaks for the very wealthy who as it is 'launder' much of their fortune offshore to avoid paying taxes (Even Republican 'holier than thou' elected officials / multi - millionaires like Vern Buchanan do this ... "Buchanan owns two reinsurance companies — Jamat Reinsurance Co. and Buchanan Reinsurance Co., in Turks and Caicos, and part of the Bermuda reinsurance company Greater Atlantic Insurance Co. The three companies offer extended warranty policies to car buyers. Buchanan invests some of the proceeds from his reinsurance companies in real estate developments in the Bahamas." - from "Wikipedia").
TadM
1:26AM MAR 18TH 2011
As to Joe Gruters... He's one of the true Republicans that recognizes the Tea Party movement for what it is. That's why he recommended reaching out to us in his bid for State Chair. He wanted to build a "permanent majority" and he knows that the Tea Party Movement is a "force to be reckoned with" and a force for good in this country. If the GOP doesn't figure that out and turn itself around?... That's when things will get interesting but I think they are beginning to get the picture. The Tea Party Movement is not about political power in a top down hierarchy. It is about returning to the bottom up, "Of the People, By the People and For the People" Republican form of Government that is guaranteed to us by Article 4, Section 4 of the US Constitution.

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20110312/ARTICLE/110319835
TadM
1:02AM MAR 18TH 2011
The "Florida TEA Party" is a fake and a plant. Real TEA people know full well that to form a political party would do nothing more than split the conservative vote, thereby ensuring a lib win for several election cycles.

There is no such thing as an official, political "Tea Party" as in the Republican or Democratic or Libertarian "Parties" that ANY true Tea Party Movement member supports unless they've been fooled.

If, on any ballot, anywhere, you see a candidate listed as a TEA candidate, that person is a fraud and/or a plant, designed to take votes away from which ever other candidate on the ballot is truly supported by the Tea Partiers.

Sometimes, the TEA candidate shown on the ballot had not entered him/herself in the race, but was "informed" after the fact.

See the Detroit News story: http://detnews.com/article/20110316/METRO02/103160415

By the way... The Tea Party movement does not want to damage the Republican Party. We want to bring it back to its real purpose. The failures of the GOP, as it is, are what caused the Tea Party Movement to happen.

We don't want to somehow "take over" the Republican Party by force or anything else. We're just the leading edge of the force that's taking over.
Todd C
10:36PM MAR 17TH 2011
I am a lifelong Republican ever since 1980 when we were rescued from a lack of pride in our country, economic chaos, fear of what tomorrow might bring.

We were heading there again before 11-02-2010 and with what is happening to gas prices today, up from $1.81 a gallon when Obama was elected to $3.57 today! WHAT?!

Conservatives and Main Street Citizens have made the decision to take back their country from those that have pushed the governmental envelope beyond reason. The line has been drawn in the sand with Health Care & HSR being key issues.

If you are a Democrat or Republican and support programs that do not make fiscal sense you are going to receive resistance now that you didn't before. We will be silent no longer.
Gailmarie
8:02PM MAR 17TH 2011
BALANCE THE BUDGET !!!! Get over it,,,, WE WON YOU LOST !!! Believe me they know the TeaParty is a Party to be recokned with. United we stand !!!
TomT
5:45PM MAR 17TH 2011
With little more than 300 registered TEA voters last fall, it's difficult to see how the TEA Party political party could have swayed any election. Perhaps, there should also have been a mention that the TEA Party 'endorsement' of Scott was scrubbed from Scott's web page within an hour of being posted, once the campaign was made aware of WHO the TEA Party actually is.
SAD
4:49PM MAR 17TH 2011
Maybe Patricia Sullivan is over her head on this issue? She must think in the grand scheme of things that she is more important than she actually is. Maybe her failed campaign for office left her feeling that people actually care what she thinks. If they did she would have won.
steve
8:45AM MAR 17TH 2011
It's a shame that the Florida Republican Party has been taken over by the tea party! And it's a shame that republican representatives that us middle of the road republicans supported are afraid of these extremist! Has the Florida Republican Party lost it's way so much that it can't win without support from these extremist? When did the Florida Republican Party become the party for only tea party and libertarians?
Todd C
10:23PM MAR 17TH 2011
When did the Reagan Conservative Republican Party get taken over by the John McCain's in the party? We are just taking it back.
Jason
4:41PM MAR 17TH 2011
Blame gerrymandering. It succeeded at making most of Florida's districts nominally-Republican by packing Democrats into a few districts and sprinkling the remainder into districts with safe Republican majorities, but inadvertently fractured sensible Rural-Urban boundaries in the process.

The result is what you see today -- otherwise-sensible urban Republican candidates who have to pander to birther nutjobs who categorically oppose spending on civilized public infrastructure because their trailer will never have a HSR station or municipal fiber within 25 miles, anyway.

We'd be far better off if someone could come up with a way to crowdsource district-drawing that allowed voters themselves to log in (with an id that's anonymously-unique and issued to each voter) to a web app that combines something like Google Maps with user-selectable stats like population density, race, ethnicity, registered political party, income, etc, and asked them to draw the boundaries for each position that they think would best aggregate them with people who share their interests. Run it through repeated weekly iterations where proposed boundaries are generated based on voter preferences and refined based upon how strongly people in various areas agree or disagree until the boundaries stabilize, then walk away happy that gerrymandering has become effectively impossible.
TomTeaParty
7:14AM MAR 17TH 2011
Some tea party groups - not the TEA Party political party - are owned lock and stock and barrel by the Republican Party of Florida. Not a one of them backed Scott over McCollum, only the official TEA Party political party went all the way for Scott, as has been accurately reported by Mr. Ward and Sunshine News.

The others, led at that time by Everett Wilkinson were endorsing McCollum and disrupting Scott news conferences.

Now Scott is Governor; Wilkinson is persona-non-grata and the TEA Party political party has won all of it's legal battles against the RPOF.

You can't make this stuff up.
SAD
4:35PM MAR 17TH 2011
Hey TomTeaParty Do not lump all tea parties in the same cesspool of slime as Wilkinson and Doug and Peg Dumire. Most of us could not stand McCollum so watch who you paint with that broad brush of smear. When people speak about the tea party they are certainly not thinking of the political party or the sleaze that controls that party. We are watching you as well.
SAD
4:33PM MAR 17TH 2011
Hey TomTeaParty Do not lump all tea parties in the same cesspool of slime as Wilkinson and Doug and Peg Dumire. Most of us could not stand McCollum so watch who you paint with that broad brush of smear. When people speak about the tea party they are certainly not thinking of the political party or the sleaze that controls that party. We are watching you as well.