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We Are Not the Ones We Have Been Waiting For

Posted by eOutlismlotcit On September - 5 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
And make no mistake: That’s a rally cry.

EDITOR’S NOTE: This column is available exclusively through United Media. For permission to reprint or excerpt this copyrighted material, please contact Carmen Puello at cpuello@unitedmedia.com.

We are not the ones we have been waiting for.

That was the takeaway message of the recent “Restoring Honor” rally on the National Mall.

Unless you were on a strict no-media diet in the run-up to Labor Day this year, you saw a lot of Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin in the coverage of the rally. But the rally Beck organized, and at which Palin appeared, honoring wounded military heroes, actually had very little to do with Beck or Palin.

#ad#In many ways, I wondered if the title was off. “Restoring Humility” would have been more accurate. It’s exactly the right message -- at any time, and especially now.

The humility aspect is somewhat foreign to politics, so many people were confused. Was this supposed to be a political rally, or a Protestant revival? No one showed up to campaign. No one even claimed God’s mandate for his agenda. They talked about grace and decency. And Glenn Beck talked about something every political pollster and campaign adviser probably advises against: sacrifice.

And then it was over.

So on the Monday night after the Mall rally, Mark Levin did what needed to be done. He hit the airwaves on his radio show and properly closed the rally: “Any society that is not rooted in God-given natural law is a society that will ultimately destroy itself. No question. It is a society that will become tyrannical. It is a society spiraling out of control -- like our society. The Founding Fathers knew this.”

What was best about the “Honor” rally was also what made it incomplete. It was great civics but it went so far. Where do we go from here? Back to our churches, this was clear. Back to our political engagement, too.

Where does God call us to? This is not an invitation to justify anything with God as your cover -- as we too often see. It is a call to serious discernment about vocation and principle.

What is true? What is prudent?

“You cannot separate philosophy from politics,” Levin said in the wake of the rally. He added: “You cannot separate our politics from God-given natural rights. So we rally. We meet. We pray. We preach.” We all have our roles in the restoring of honor, in the saving of our identity as a country. “Never ever surrender politics to those who would use government against us. That’s what happened last time around. Look what happened. We don’t choose between God and politics. We embrace God who directs us into politics.”

Watching Glenn Beck’s rally, I thought of Mother Teresa, whose life and death we’ve been celebrating on the anniversary of what would have been her 100th birthday. Not because anyone there was necessarily a saint, but because you got the sense people there do want to do the right thing. Because they believe there is such a thing. And they are not looking to religion as an escape from the challenges of the day, but as their truest engagement, from which all actions flow in the pursuit of happiness.

In a 1949 article in The Thomist, philosopher Aurel Kolnai wrote: “It is indubitably true that a system of government in which the ‘plain man’ as such ‘has a say’ is intrinsically better than government by an esoteric caste of public officials no matter how well bred, ‘cultured’ or ‘public spirited.’ This is what perennially validates Democracy in the sane sense of the term, as contrasted to its erection into a false religion of secular messianism. Democracy, in that same sense, means participation at various levels of the broad strata of the people in the shaping of public policy.”

The tea party strives for that participation. So much of the engagement and rallying we’re seeing is rooted in something deeper than the next vote before us. It’s in tension with so many of our institutions that have insisted for so long that truth is what we make it. And that’s all the more reason to be not only looking back at what men before us discerned, but to keep our ear to the eternal as we make our way today.

Instead of spending the next two months, as many of us have spent the last week (and two years), debating Glenn and Sarah’s style, analyzing how sharp their Fox News prep is, and trading gossip while watching Dancing with the Stars, we need to participate. This is what the tea party seeks to do. We need to be involved in elections with a spirit of seriousness and even love. We need to not be merely angry about what is going on in many offices in Washington, but know why we’re angry and know what the change we’re voting for is, exactly. We needn’t simply get caught up in a mood that throws good guys out with the bad because there’s a feeling that the whole town ought to be Febrezed. We need to make sure that our children know why we bother to love this country and want it to be good. And at the same time, “never let your praying knees get lazy,” as one contemporary country crooner puts it.

We have a call to answer. Not because we’re anything special, not because we’re perfect -- but because We the People know there’s something better than us. And inasmuch as we can reflect it -- with justice and tranquility, securing the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity -- we’re going to be okay in the long run.

-- Kathryn Jean Lopez is editor-at-large of National Review Online. She can be reached at klopez@nationalreview.com.

Kathryn Jean Lopez

Both Parties Say Tea Party Hands Them November Wins (CQPolitics.com)

Posted by Yahoo! News: Politics News On September - 5 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
CQPolitics.com - Republican Senators on Sunday predicted widespread victories for their party in November, but Democratic Party operatives said they could keep their hold on Congress thanks to the same group of voters earning GOP praise: the tea party movement.

Tea party or establishment, GOP looks for gains (AP)

Posted by Yahoo! News: Politics News On September - 5 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Delaware Republican Senate candidate, Rep. Mike Castle, R-Del. is seen at the Festival Hispano  in Millsboro, Del., in this photo taken Sunday, Aug. 22, 2010.  (AP Photo/Gail Burton)AP - In the turbulent year of the tea party, Republican Rep. Mike Castle of Delaware set out to jangle no nerves as he ran for a Senate seat long held by Vice President Joseph Biden. It's the way Republican strategists originally envisioned 2010, a roster of seasoned politicians pointing the party toward significant gains in the Senate.


WASHINGTON — Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who rode voter anger to office in New Jersey last year, is endorsing Mike Castle's bid to win the GOP primary in Delaware and is joining a pack of party leaders trying to block a tea party-backed candidate's bid.

Christie, a graduate of the University of Delaware, endorsed Castle, a nine-term Republican congressman and former governor who is facing Christine O'Donnell. Republicans have rushed to paint O'Donnell as a fraud, citing shady financial records and a record of statements that are clearly not true.

"I urge every Republican out there from Delaware who believes in smaller, smarter government to send somebody like Mike Castle to the United States Senate," Christie said outside the University of Delaware football season opener.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE – An insider's view of this year's elections based on dispatches from around the nation.

___

The latest example of O'Donnell's problems: Twenty-one years after she began her undergraduate work, she can accurately call herself a college graduate as of this week. A spokesman for Fairleigh Dickinson University said O'Donnell on Wednesday earned her bachelor's degree in English literature, which she has claimed for years.

Despite problems with O'Donnell's record, establishment Republicans were taking no chances on winning in November.

Castle, Washington's preferred candidate, went up with radio ads and rushed other parts of his media plan after Republicans watched Sen. Lisa Murkowski lose her Alaska primary to tea party-backed Joe Miller.

The Tea Party Express, a California-based group, has announced it is backing O'Donnell and plans to spend six figures in the race for Vice President Joe Biden's former Senate seat in Delaware.

___

A shadowy group calling itself "The Tea Party" – taking advantage of the popular tea party groups around the nation – won't be allowed on Michigan's November ballot after an order Friday from the Michigan Supreme Court.

The high court's 5-2 decision lets stand a ruling this week from the Michigan Court of Appeals that keeps "The Tea Party" off the ballot because it didn't comply with some technical requirements in state law.

Republicans and tea party activists consider "The Tea Party" a Democratic-supported fake aimed at siphoning away votes from conservative candidates. The effort has connections to a former Oakland County Democratic Party official.

The appeals court ruled that "The Tea Party" could not be on the ballot because of an irregularity on its petitions circulated to make the ballot. The word "The" in "The Tea Party" was not in 24-point bold face type on its petitions as required by law.

The state Supreme Court denied a request to appeal, with the majority saying it was "not persuaded that the questions presented should be reviewed" by the court.

"Today's decision by the court is a win for all of the dedicated grass-roots activists who are part of the true Tea Party movement and it is a win for democracy," Michigan Republican Party Chairman Ron Weiser said in a statement.

Messages were left seeking comment from "The Tea Party" chairman Mark Steffek and attorney Michael Hodge after Friday's ruling.

___

Republican Senate candidate Kelly Ayotte – a former New Hampshire attorney general – received more than $10,000 from executives of a Texas company charged with deceptive trade practices.

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott charged Houston-based TaxMasters Inc. and its chief executive officer, Patrick Cox, in May with multiple violations of the state's deceptive practices and debt collection act. Cox, sales vice president Alex Clamon and salesman James Welch contributed a total of $10,600 last year to Ayotte's campaign.

Ayotte spokesman Jeff Grappone told the Concord Monitor that Ayotte will watch the legal process and await an outcome. He said Ayotte will return the money if they are convicted of violating the law.

___

Quick hits:

_ Republican gubernatorial candidate Phil Moffett said Friday he's willing to "go to the carpet" to legalize the production of industrial hemp in Kentucky. The Louisville businessman voiced support for industrial hemp in a question-and-answer session with libertarian voters in Lexington on Thursday and again Friday in an interview with The Associated Press. Hemp is related to marijuana and currently all hemp products sold in the U.S. must be imported.

_ Republican Senate candidate Carly Fiorina on Friday endorsed an oil company-funded ballot initiative that seeks to indefinitely delay California's landmark global warming law. The announcement comes two days after the former Hewlett-Packard Co. chief executive refused to take a position during her debate with Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer.

_ NBC canceled Sunday's "Meet the Press" debate between Democratic Rep. Kendrick Meek and Republican Marco Rubio because the GOP nominee's 83-year-old father is ill. Gov. Charlie Crist, running as an independent, had previously declined an invitation.

_ Sen. Russ Feingold plans to speak at a massive Labor Day rally in Wisconsin. Just not when President Barack Obama will be there. Schedules show Feingold, a Democrat who faces a serious re-election challenge from Republican Ron Johnson, will be elsewhere in the state when the Democratic president speaks in Milwaukee.

___

Associated Press writers Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., Norma Love in Concord, N.H., Roger Alford in Frankfort, Ky., and Judy Lin in Sacramento, Calif., contributed to this report.

Scott McAdams, the Democrat running for the U.S. Senate in Alaska against Tea Party candidate Joe Miller, is a burly dark-haired guy who looks every bit the football player he is. He said he got into politics because he was the Sitka, Alaska, high school football coach and had to go before the school board to try to get the then-club program deemed a recognized school sport.

He spent his early years in Petersburg, another town in Southeast Alaska, then moved to central California, where he graduated from high school. McAdams returned to Alaska and worked as a commercial fisherman in Petersburg, Kodiak and out in the Bering Sea before graduating with a degree in secondary education from Sheldon Jackson College in Sitka.

He's been married for 17 years to Romee McAdams, who is the tribal recruitment coordinator for the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Care Consortium. They have three kids: Kaitlin 16, Chloe 8 and Gavin, 5.

"I get my strength from my family," he said.

McAdams was elected to the school board in 2002 and then two years ago ran and won a three-way race for mayor. He's started touting that experience as an elected official, emphasizing in speeches and interviews that he's the only candidate in the race who's ever cut a public budget or voted on a public budget. Miller, a Fairbanks attorney, has never been elected to office.

McAdams also points to his tenure as president and a member of the Association of Alaska School Boards, his time on the Alaska Municipal League, and his chairmanship of the Southeast Conference of Mayors as giving him a head start on Miller in terms of statewide involvement.

In an interview, McAdams is low-key and deliberate, choosing his words and waiting for a reporter to finish writing them down before moving on. He says that, as a small-town politico and member of nonpartisan boards, he's used to a "greater spirit of collaboration as opposed to partisan bickering" and that he would work to tone down the rhetoric if the voters send him to Washington.

"Washington, D.C., is all about partisanship," he said. "It's about shaming, grandstanding and scapegoating your political opponent to receive chairmanships, as opposed to being driven by mission or vision."

That's a different McAdams than the one who took the podium at the Democrat's Unity Dinner in Anchorage the night after the primary. That McAdams was robust in his partisanship, rousing the crowd like a veteran pol with his roasting of Miller and the Republicans.

Still, McAdams vows to run a clean and decent race that will offer voters a distinct choice between the two men, their personal styles and their politics. "I think Joe Miller has proven in the course of this election that he will say or do almost anything to get elected," he said. "I think he ran a combative campaign against Lisa Murkowski that was unfair, dishonest and both Lisa Murkowski and Alaska deserve better than that."

McAdams hopes people will pay attention to the differences between him and Miller on the issues. He points out that Miller advocates the repeal of Social Security and Medicare, which McAdams does not. While Miller wants to wean Alaska off federal dollars and reduce federal spending overall, McAdams wants the federal government to continue investing in Alaska.

"We certainly do owe it to our kids to do the best we can to live within our means," he said. "Being a steward of our fiscal resources is important. But Alaska is a young state, and it should remain a place where federal dollars are used to develop our infrastructure."

McAdams supports safe development of oil and gas in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, as well as offshore in Alaska's Arctic -- a position other prominent Alaska Democrats hold, even though it runs counter to their national peers. He thinks Alaska's political leaders need to do a better job of convincing people throughout the country that it can be done is an environmentally sound and responsible manner.

"Ultimately, this campaign is going to be about ideas," McAdams said. "I think Joe Miller has been very clear in articulating the things he's opposed to, but I don't see much vision regarding how we develop Alaska."

Read more about Scott McAdams at AlaskaDispatch.com.

Tea Party Cools on Colorado Favorite

Posted by Wall Street Journal On September - 4 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Luis Heredia: They want Jan Brewer to be President!

Posted by Luis Heredia On September - 4 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Arizona's unelected governor Jan Brewer is taking a page right out of Sarah Palin's playbook: Attack your opponent with questionable claims and outright lies, scare the voters until they forget about the jobs you've lost, and create a wave of fear you can ride right into office.

And her plans for Arizona? Well, see for yourself:

Nothing but dead air.

Just like Sarah Palin, it's clear that No Plan Jan is lost without the cue cards her lobbyist cartel puts in front of her.

But here's why she's really dangerous: Tea Party groups in Arizona and around the country are mobilizing behind Jan Brewer because she is little more than a shell candidate to attack Barack Obama and any Democrat who crosses her path. From SB1070 to anti-health reform lawsuits, Brewer is doing anything she can to mobilize extremist groups and push her far-right base to the polls.

This isn't just an Arizona problem-- Jan Brewer for President groups are taking off on social networking sites, and one poll shows her trailing President Obama by only 5 points for 2012. This could be our last and best chance to stop Jan Brewer before she takes her agenda to the national stage.

This Labor Day weekend, help us stop the madness! Let's show our strength-- help us get 1,000 new donors before midnight on Labor Day. Not only will this send a message, it will give the Arizona Democratic Party the resources we need to stand up to Jan Brewer and stop her NOW.

It doesn't matter how much you can give-- $1, $10 or $100-- this is about sending a message and telling Jan Brewer that we won't put up with her fear mongering any longer. Arizona deserves better than No Plan Jan, and with your help we will make sure she's never elected to the governor's office!

CLICK HERE TO CONTRIBUTE TODAY!

HuffPost's Sam Stein appeared on MSNBC's "Hardball with Chris Matthews" Friday evening to discuss the possibility and possible repercussions of Republicans retaking Congress in November.

Reviewing tape of the "starve the beast" drumbeats uttered by House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and tea party-backed Republican Senate candidate Joe Miller of Alaska, among others, Matthews pressed Stein and co-panelist Steve Kornacki of Salon on the potential for another game of chicken akin to that between former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and then-President Bill Clinton, which culminated in a brief government shutdown in 1995.

"All of these people live in the belief that they lost power because they abandoned their principles during the Bush years," Stein said. "They think they could actually win this thing, and they also want to stick to principle."

WATCH:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

DENVER — Republican Dan Maes, Democrat John Hickenlooper and American Constitution Party candidate Tom Tancredo are officially on the November ballot in the race for Colorado governor.

Secretary of State Bernie Buescher certified the list Friday. Buescher says any changes to the ballot would have to come from county clerks from all 64 counties.

Maes has pledged to stay in the race despite efforts by Republicans to recruit someone they feel would have a better chance of winning. They are concerned about Maes' series of embarrassing missteps that culminated with bizarre claims about his shadowy undercover law enforcement career in Kansas in the 1980s.

But Maes, a tea party favorite, says he can't let down his supporters and that people are "sick and tired of the machine."

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

DENVER (AP) – Dan Maes likes to brag about taking down the political machine in becoming Colorado's Republican gubernatorial nominee. The way he's going, it may be the only victory in a short-lived political career.

Republicans have spent the week desperately trying to get the tea party favorite to quit the race amid a series of embarrassing missteps that culminated with bizarre claims about his shadowy undercover law enforcement career in Kansas in the 1980s.

Maes vowed to stay on the ticket, depriving Republicans of a chance to find a new candidate before a Friday ballot-certification deadline. That means the party is likely stuck with Maes, who says he's staying in the race for voters who are fed up with the political establishment.

"People are sick and tired of power brokers and they're sick and tired of the machine," the former businessman said.

It all adds up to an eventful ticket in the race to replace Democrat Bill Ritter, who is stepping down.

Maes faces Denver's quirky Democratic mayor, John Hickenlooper, a brew pub owner and restaurateur with ample funding. He has stayed above the fray while running a TV ad showing him taking clothed showers trying to wash away the grime of negative political ads.

Also in the race: Tom Tancredo, who quit the GOP and qualified for the ballot as a third-party candidate. Tancredo has alienated many over his career with his hardline stands on illegal immigration and remarks that Mecca should be bombed if the U.S. suffers another terror attack.

Maes has never been far away from attention-getting headlines himself.

He paid a $17,500 fine for campaign finance violations. He vowed to fire 2,000 state workers "just like that" if elected, even though it may be illegal. He drew international ridicule when he suggested a Denver bike-sharing program is part of a U.N. conspiracy to control American cities.

As if that wasn't enough, he then started talking about his law enforcement career in Kansas in the 1980s.

Maes claimed he was fired by the police department in Liberal, Kan., because police and politicians were corrupt. He said he worked undercover for state investigators. But the Kansas Bureau of Investigation denied Maes ever worked for them, and Liberal's police department won't talk about Maes.

Prominent Republicans, including former Sen. Hank Brown and Senate candidate Ken Buck have abandoned Maes, as have several prominent tea party leaders. All cited character issues with Maes.

Former state Senate leader John Andrews called Maes a "manifestly unfit nominee."

Hear Us Now, a patriot group based in Englewood, sent Maes a letter saying it "cannot stress in strong enough terms the need for you to remove yourself from the race due to the financial and fiscal mismanagement questions."

Maes' candidacy has damaged Republican chances of taking the governor's seat in an election year that nationwide favors Republicans in general. It's also distracting from party efforts to defeat rookie incumbent Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet, retake both houses of the Legislature from Democrats, and increase the GOP's representation in Colorado's congressional delegation. Republicans currently hold just two of seven House seats.

It's been especially hard on Colorado tea party supporters, who are now divided over their support for Maes. Political analyst Eric Sondermann said it's a sign the movement is growing up and being forced to make compromises.

"They need to decide if they're going to stick with the message of standing for pure, clean candidates or get pragmatic. Ultimately when new political movements become more mature, they become more pragmatic," Sondermann said.

Lana Fore-Warkocz, publisher of a tea party newspaper in Colorado Springs, said she still supports Maes. She said the continuing attacks have split the tea party movement in Colorado.

"He was never meant to win, but he won," she said. "They said he wouldn't win the state assembly and he got 49 percent and top billing. They said he wouldn't get the money to win, and he beat Scott McInnis in the primary. The GOP tried to put in replacements for the general election, including Jane Norton and Bob Beauprez, and Dan refused to step down."

Tea party supporters, Fore-Warkocz said, will "support Dan when they know the truth."

Joe Miller Campaign Funded By God, K Street

Posted by Ryan Grim On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

This story has been updated

Alaska Republican Joe Miller is telling his supporters that he is refusing to take corporate and out-of-state money, yet the Tea-Party-backed candidate has hired a prominent K Street fundraiser to help with his bid for the Senate.

Miller, to date, has relied extensively on the Lord to raise funds for his Senate run, his campaign told supporters in an email sent Sunday evening that was obtained by HuffPost.

"So far the Lord has always provided the money in this grass roots campaign, and this time God is going to use you to provide!" Miller's campaign told supporters, inviting them to attend a fundraiser with Miller and his wife. "It cost alot of money to run a clean campaign and we all know that Joe's campaign isn't receiving any monies from corporations or from out of State entities."

That pledge, however, runs counter to news, broken by Roll Call, that Miller has hired Mike Gula, a high-powered Washington fundraiser with The Gula Graham Group. K Street will now be supplementing the Lord's work. "Gula is in the process of assembling a K Street steering committee on behalf of the Miller campaign, and sources say he would not have taken Miller on if he didn't think he could raise political action committee money for him," Roll Call reported Friday. Gula and Miller did not immediately return calls requesting comment.

The full fundraising email:

Sent: Sunday, August 29, 2010 8:39 PM


Subject: Mon.

Greetings,

We don't want to loose the momentumn of this great campaign!! We are going to get Joe Miller elected, it's just that for reasons we don't understand God wants us to have a waiting spell. :) We need to be wise as serpents and gentle as doves, and keep the campaign uplifted in constant prayer.

In order for Joe to keep campaigning he needs funds. So far the Lord has always provided the money in this grass roots campaign, and this time God is going to use you to provide!

A fundraiser will be held at Campaign Headquarters on Monday from 5:00-8:30 pm. We need as many people to show up and make this a great event for the campaign. Joe and Kathleen will both be joining us, let's encourage them by showing all the support we can. The one way they need us right now is through donating funds!! It cost alot of money to run a clean campaign and we all know that Joe's campaign isn't receiving any monies from corporations or from out of State entities.

Refreshments will be provided

MONDAY 5:00-7:00pm OPEN HOUSE

7:30-8:30pm FUNDRAISER (Joe Miller will be joining us at this time)

Campaign Headquarters

401 East Northern Lights, Suite 202

*Co-Hosted with Senator Fred Dyson & Wes Keller*

*Bring a friend

*Drinks will be provided (soda, water)

*Bring Check Book or Credit Card

*Chips will be provided

*Bring a smile


Invite all your friends and let's come together to have a great evening and donate to the campaign that we all believe in!!

Paid for by Joe Miller for US Senate

Please RSVP with ASAP:

-- Harmony

The Tea Party Movement 2010-09-03 15:54:00

Posted by The Tea Party Movement On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
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Posted by The Tea Party Movement On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
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The Tea Party Movement 2010-09-03 15:54:00

Posted by The Tea Party Movement On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
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The Tea Party Movement 2010-09-03 15:54:00

Posted by The Tea Party Movement On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
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GOP, Tea Party leaders back away from Maes

Posted by admin On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Despite mounting pressure from the GOP establishment and Tea Party groups to get out of the governor’s race, Republican Dan Maes continued to dig in his heels Thursday, saying he wasn’t going anywhere.

Despite mounting pressure from both the GOP establishment and Tea Party groups to get out of the governor's race, Republican Dan Maes continued to dig in his heels Thursday, saying he wasn't going anywhere.
NAACP leaders have a message for the Tea Party movement: We're watching you.

Miller Campaign Funded By God, K Street

Posted by admin On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Alaska Republican Joe Miller is telling his supporters that he is refusing to take corporate and out-of-state money, yet the Tea-Party-backed candidate has hired a prominent K Street fundraiser to help with his bid for the Senate.

Miller, to date, has relied extensively on the Lord to raise funds for his Senate run, his campaign told supporters in an email sent Sunday evening that was obtained by HuffPost.

"So far the Lord has always provided the money in this grass roots campaign, and this time God is going to use you to provide!" Miller's campaign told supporters, inviting them to attend a fundraiser with Miller and his wife. "It cost alot of money to run a clean campaign and we all know that Joe's campaign isn't receiving any monies from corporations or from out of State entities."

That pledge, however, runs counter to news, broken by Roll Call, that Miller has hired Mike Gula, a high-powered Washington fundraiser with The Gula Graham Group. K Street will now be supplementing the Lord's work. "Gula is in the process of assembling a K Street steering committee on behalf of the Miller campaign, and sources say he would not have taken Miller on if he didn't think he could raise political action committee money for him," Roll Call reported Friday. Gula and Miller did not immediately return calls requesting comment.

The full fundraising email:

Sent: Sunday, August 29, 2010 8:39 PM


Subject: Mon.

Greetings,

We don't want to loose the momentumn of this great campaign!! We are going to get Joe Miller elected, it's just that for reasons we don't understand God wants us to have a waiting spell. :) We need to be wise as serpents and gentle as doves, and keep the campaign uplifted in constant prayer.

In order for Joe to keep campaigning he needs funds. So far the Lord has always provided the money in this grass roots campaign, and this time God is going to use you to provide!

A fundraiser will be held at Campaign Headquarters on Monday from 5:00-8:30 pm. We need as many people to show up and make this a great event for the campaign. Joe and Kathleen will both be joining us, let's encourage them by showing all the support we can. The one way they need us right now is through donating funds!! It cost alot of money to run a clean campaign and we all know that Joe's campaign isn't receiving any monies from corporations or from out of State entities.

Refreshments will be provided

MONDAY 5:00-7:00pm OPEN HOUSE

7:30-8:30pm FUNDRAISER (Joe Miller will be joining us at this time)

Campaign Headquarters

401 East Northern Lights, Suite 202

*Co-Hosted with Senator Fred Dyson & Wes Keller*

*Bring a friend

*Drinks will be provided (soda, water)

*Bring Check Book or Credit Card

*Chips will be provided

*Bring a smile


Invite all your friends and let's come together to have a great evening and donate to the campaign that we all believe in!!

Paid for by Joe Miller for US Senate

Please RSVP with ASAP:

-- Harmony

Wary of tea party, GOP attacks Senate candidate

Posted by admin On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

FILE - In this Aug. 31, 2009 file photo, Delaware Republican Senate candidate, Rep. Mike Castle, R-Del. answers a question during a town hall meeting in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)Delaware Republicans call Senate hopeful Christine O’Donnell a liar who “could not be elected dog catcher” in a fierce attack that underscores GOP fears of the tea party-backed candidate knocking off top recruit Rep. Mike Castle and winning the nomination.


Posted by admin On September - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
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