|
Darlene Shelton told Tennessee Watchdog that Organizing
for Action, designed to promote President Obama’s
agenda, is spreading throughout
Tennessee. |
By Chris Butler, Tennessee Watchdog, NASHVILLE — Eager tea party protesters went toe-to-toe in
Nashville Thursday against a progressive nonprofit,
Organizing for Action, devoted solely to advancing
President Barack Obama’s agenda — while both groups waited for Obama’s motorcade to pass them by.
This story, however, doesn’t quite play out the way you might expect. Both groups held signs either for or against Obama, although the OFA
clearly had an advantage with professionally made signs, while tea
partiers’ signs were mostly homemade.
Both organizations say they are grassroots.
And while both groups are nonprofits,
Time magazine recently documented that one of them has very wealthy financial backers.
|
Obamacare supporter Edward Adam told Tennessee
Watchdog that Obama’s intentions are good. |
And no, tea partiers are not the recipients of this largess, and the
Koch brothers are not the financial backers in question.
Actually, OFA received $21 million last year from 19 wealthy
businessmen and women, all of whom donated or raised amounts ranging
from $100,000 to $500,000 each,
Time reported.
Newsweb Corp. CEO
Fred Eychaner, for instance, donated $500,000.
One of the OFA protesters in Nashville,
Darlene Shelton, told
Tennessee Watchdog that the nonprofit has established itself at chapters all over Tennessee, including
Knoxville,
Murfreesboro,
Franklin and, recently,
Nashville.
|
Tea Party members awaiting President Obama’s motorcade
in Nashville Thursday said they were very careful about making
sure the mainstream media didn’t portray them in an unflattering light |
“We recruit people. We have phone banking. We call different people to get them involved and volunteer,” Shelton said.
“We then call representatives and try to get them to push for the
issues that the president has set forth. We are the ones who voted for
him.”
According to its website , OFA operates as a social welfare organization, as a 501(c)(4). The
Huffington Post reports that OFA operates
Obama’s Twitter account.
The
organization’s Facebook page for Tennessee, which has more than 7,000 followers, seems to revolve around the personalities of Obama and his wife,
Michelle, and their pet political platforms.
‘Well-intentioned’
Obama came to Nashville Thursday to speak at that city’s McGavock High School about jobs.
|
Despite sharply differing political views, the pro-Obama supporters
and
the Tea Party protestors managed to have civil discourse with
one
another. In this photo a man who identified himself only as
“Joe
Citizen” speaks to an unidentified Obama supporter |
Edward Adam, a 2003 graduate of the school who didn’t say if
he belonged to OFA, held up a sign promoting Obamacare and said it has
improved his life — even though he later said something that seemed to
call that testimony into question.
“I’m getting better from a situation where I needed health care, and I
didn’t have it before, but now I can take care of my medical issues. I
don’t know why anybody would want to protest it,” Adam said, when asked
about the new law.
But does he have health insurance only because of Obamacare? “Well, I already had it through my work,” Adam said.
“Obama means well. He is well-intentioned and he is only trying to help people advance beyond where we were under Bush.”
Meanwhile, on the tea party side of the road, protesters, who were
greater in number, said they had to exercise due diligence and warn
others not to hold inflammatory signs. To do otherwise could invite
trouble from the mainstream media, they said.
|
Tea Party member Mel London (front) said the only
offensive signs he saw
while awaiting President Obama’s
motorcade were the ones being held by
the people behind him. |
“It’s just a matter of not having signs that are crass and tasteless,” said Ben Cunningham, president of the Nashville-based Tennessee Tax Revolt.
“If somebody puts up something that’s over the top then that will be
the media’s story. The message we want to get across is our opposition
to the president’s agenda.”
Another tea partier, Scott Nicoll, of Manchester, told
Tennessee Watchdog he has personally witnessed national mainstream media
outlets distort the nature of tea party movement protests he
participated in while visiting Washington, D.C.
|
Darlene Shelton told Tennessee Watchdog that Organizing
for Action, designed to promote President Obama’s agenda,
is spreading throughout Tennessee. |
“With every protest I’ve been to the news has been that we are
violent or ignorant. They claimed that racism was prevalent,” Nicoll
said. “As a matter of fact I was right next to a black man protesting
with me. If we don’t show up then the media will just say that we don’t
care anymore. Either way, it’s going to be negative.”
Another tea partier, Mel London, who is black, said he saw only a few hateful signs.
“You see those signs over there that say ‘Go Forward with Obama’?” he
asked, while pointing. Those are the only destructive signs here that I
see.”
Contact Christopher Butler at chris@tennesseewatchdog.org or follow him and submit story ideas onhis official Facebook page.
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