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Would members of the Tea Party movement be in favor of the federal government increasing welfare benefits such as food stamps? Explain your answer in one or two sentences.

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Answer: SEE EXPLANATION

Explanation:

What is the Tea Party – and how does it work? Some see it as a popular uprising, while others dismiss it as an “astroturf” movement manufactured by fat cat funders. Both views are too simple, as revealed by research drawing on both national evidence and local interviews. Tea Party dynamism arises from the interaction of three different forces:

Grassroots activism: Protestors mounted demonstrations during 2009 and 2010. They also established about 850 to 1000 local groups spread across the country, where Tea Partiers meet regularly to plan activities, learn about issues, and monitor Republican candidates and officeholders.

Right-wing media cheerleading: Conservative media hosts from Fox News, talk radio, and blogs spread the word at the formative stage, and then helped the Tea Party shift agendas of national political debate.

Money and ideas wielded by elite political operatives: Wealthy funders and professional advocates are deploying millions of dollars to push Republican officeholders and candidates toward the right and promote longstanding extreme ideas such as abolishing government regulations, further reducing taxes on business and the wealthy, and privatizing Social Security and Medicare.

Grassroots Tea Partiers and Their Beliefs

As many as three in ten Americans have expressed sympathy with the Tea Party – but committed activists who attend meetings add up to about two hundred thousand people. Tea Party supporters and activists have long been conservative-minded. They hate Barack Obama, vote for Republicans, and share a determination to “take their country back” from Democrats. Tea Partiers tend to be middle-class whites, more economically comfortable and better educated than their fellow citizens. Most are over 45 years old, and many are in their sixties and beyond. At least half are socially conservative Christians. Contrary to public stereotypes, Tea Partiers have complex and ambivalent views about government:

Answer:

I feel that certain members of the Boston Tea Party would be in favor of the federal government increasing welfare benefits such as food stamps. The members of the Tea Party wanted lower taxes, wanted the government to be less in complete control, and wanted decreased national debt to other countries.

(If you were leaning in another direction for this answer, here's another one.)

I feel that certain members of the Boston Tea Party would NOT be in favor of the federal government increasing welfare benefits, such as food stamps. The members of the Tea Party wanted lower taxes, wanted the government to be less in complete control, and wanted to decrease national debt.

Both ways would work, hope this helps!!

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