24% of Voters are Tea Party

Twenty-four percent (24%) of U.S. voters now say they consider themselves a part of the Tea Party movement, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Thatâ??s an eight-point increase from 16% a month ago.

Another 10% say they are not a part of the movement but have close friends or family members who are.

Fifty-five percent (55%) of voters say they have no ties to the Tea Party movement. Eleven percent (11%) more are not sure.

The rise in Tea party support is perhaps not surprising at a time when more voters than ever (58%) favor repeal of the national health care plan just passed by Democrats in Congress and signed into law by President Obama. Most voters remain convinced that the health care plan will require an increase in taxes on the middle class as a time when 66% of voters believe America is already overtaxed.

Forty-two percent (42%) of Republicans say they are part of the movement, compared to nine percent (9%) of Democrats and 24% of voters not affiliated with either major party. Thirty-five percent (35%) of Mainstream voters view themselves as Tea Party members, while 84% of the Political Class say they have no ties to the movement.

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Voters remain closely divided in their views of the movement which formally came to life a year ago on Tax Day, April 15, to protest the high-tax, big-government policies of both major political parties. Forty percent (40%) have a favorable opinion of the Tea Party movement, while 42% view the protest movement unfavorably. Eighteen percent (18%) are undecided.

These numbers are virtually unchanged from March. However, views of the movement have declined slightly over the past year. Just days after they were held last April, 51% of Americans had a favorable view of the â??tea partiesâ?? held nationwide, including 32% who said their view of the events was very favorable.

Seventy percent (70%) of Republican voters view the Tea Party movement favorably. Seventy-one percent (71%) of Democrats do not. Unaffiliated voters are almost evenly divided in their views.

More noticeably, 96% of the Political Class regard the Tea Party movement unfavorably, while 58% of Mainstream voters have a favorable opinion of the movement.

When it comes to major issues confronting the nation, 48% of voters now say the average Tea Party member is closer to their views than President Obama is. Forty-four percent (44%) hold the opposite view and believe the presidentâ??s views are closer to their own.

Fifty-two percent (52%) believe the average member of the Tea Party movement has a better understanding of the issues facing America today than the average member of Congress.

Tea Party voters are changing the equation in several closely-watched Senate races, including Nevada where Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is struggling for reelection and Floridaâ??s Republican Primary where Marco Rubio is far outdistancing establishment candidate Governor Charlie Crist.

Thirty-five percent (35%) of voters now think Republicans and Democrats are so much alike that an entirely new political party is needed to represent the American people. Nearly half (47%) of voters disagree and say a new party is not needed

If the Tea Party was organized as a political party, 34% of voters would prefer a Democrat in a three-way congressional race. In that hypothetical match-up, the Republican gets 27% of the vote with the Tea Party hopeful in third at 21%. However, if only the Democrat or Republican had a real chance to win, most of the Tea Party supporters would vote for the Republican.

Just 21% of voters nationwide believe that the federal government now enjoys the consent of the governed.

In his new book, In Search of Self-Governance, Scott Rasmussen observes that the American people are â??united in the belief that our political system is broken, that politicians are corrupt, and that neither major political party has the answers.â?? He adds that â??the gap between Americans who want to govern themselves and the politicians who want to rule over them may be as big today as the gap between the colonies and England during the 18th century.â??

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The are getting to the point where they could be a real 3rd party.

[quote]John S. wrote:
The are getting to the point where they could be a real 3rd party.[/quote]

This only furthers my assertation in another thread. The GOP blackballed Ron Paul in the GOP primaries, ANY such shenaigans this time around will mean an HUGE loss for them. I’ll even go one step further and say it again, if they do not promote an electable GOP candidate, per the Tea Parties wishes (small government being the key here) they will lose BADLY. That is all they have to do and they will Crush Obama. So GOP whats it going to be, Crush Obama, or try to put a big government republican in power so you can try to keep a big machine and have it work “for you” instead of against you? Oh Yea, also knowing option 2 will be absolutely futile.

V

This could be a big problem, by dividing the Conservative vote. Someone better get on this.

[quote]John S. wrote:
The are getting to the point where they could be a real 3rd party.[/quote]

That is certainly one of a few things that could reelect Obama.

Maybe this isn’t called being a 3rd party?

Nearly half of Republicans have sympathy with the Tea Party. The Tea Party candidates (like Rand Paul) are running as Republicans. That seems to me like a new face of the Republican Party, not a third party. It’s possible that in the next few elections, we’ll have Democrats and Tea Party or Tea Party-inspired Republicans.

There’s some confirming evidence that there are quite a few Tea Partiers, from Gallup, Winston, and CBS.
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/04/teacup-half-full.html

Also, check this out – correlation is not causation, but it’s worth taking seriously.
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/04/new-data-on-tea-party-sympathizers.html

[quote]MaximusB wrote:
This could be a big problem, by dividing the Conservative vote. Someone better get on this. [/quote]

I think it would be a good sign for the long-term of the conservative movement if it did.

I’d bet big money it won’t, and come November, you’re going to see the same Republicans as always get elected, even if they’re calling themselves Tea Party… like batshit-crazy Michele Bachmann… same Republican, but riding the Tea Party wave.

I think the only way the Tea Party will turn into something legitimate is if it survives the election, and either gets non-Republican members elected, or throws enough elections by a close enough margin that people really take notice.

the tea party is not a tea party - yet!
it is a culture -
a culture of independence -
trying to diffuse the culture of dependence being fomented by progressives.
read END THE FED by RON PAUL