UPDATE: Danville TEA Party snuffs bonfire after uproar

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UPDATE 8:10 p.m. Monday
The Danville TEA Party has officially cancelled its bonfire and effigy burning planned for Saturday after the event received nationwide interest, according to the group’s chairman, Nigel Coleman.

Coleman said Monday the owner of the property in Blairs has pulled the plug on the event because of the negative attention the rally has garnered. The bonfire originally included burning effigies of Rep. Tom Perriello, D-5th District, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., in response to their support of the health care legislation.

“The media attention has gotten pretty large,” Coleman said. “(The property owner) didn’t want to be viewed poorly, and of course we didn’t want that for them.”

News of the event quickly spread online to national news outlets, blogs and even Comedy Central. The effigy burning is “definitely ruled out” for the future, Coleman said, but the intention was to teach “a history lesson” and compare the event to the birth of the Sons of Liberty after the 1765 Stamp Act.

“I feel like I obviously handled this poorly, as far as the press goes,” Coleman said. “We really should have thought this through more ... and seen how this was going to affect not only us, but other TEA parties and the TEA party movement in general.”

Coleman, who seemed disappointed, would not say whether he had received any specific requests from other TEA party movements to cancel the event, but said that “I’m always in contact with other TEA party leaders and I always take their feedback into consideration.”
Republicans react

Some Republican leaders have distanced themselves from the event. Tucker Watkins, chairman of the 5th District Republican Committee, declined to comment. Three of the seven declared challengers to Perriello for the 5th District seat in 2010 responded, including Laurence Verga, of Albemarle County; Feda Kidd Morton, of Fluvanna County; and Ron Ferrin, of Campbell County.

“I think we need to have very open and civil discourse in this country,” Verga said. “Reasonable adults can disagree on points and come together as Americans, but that (event) to me is an unconscionable thing to do and I would not participate in any way shape or form.”
Morton praised the Danville TEA Party for “engaging voters of the district to voice opinions on the health care debate.”

“Perriello’s blatant disregard for the opinion of his constituents voiced in town halls he hosted shows his lack of commitment to those who elected him and the needs of his district,” she said in an e-mailed statement. “I have tremendous respect for the TEA Party’s effort and its commitment to protecting our liberty.”

Ferrin disagreed, saying he believed “we can do better.”

“While I certainly understand the frustration…” Ferrin said in an e-mail, “I do not believe that burning anyone in effigy would yield any positive result… I believe that the change we were sold is a change we cannot live with and I will work to repeal it.”

The remaining four candidates could not be reached for comment: Ken Boyd of Albemarle County; state Sen. Robert Hurt, R-Chatham; Michael McPadden, of Albemarle County; and Bedford County resident Bradley Rees, who is running as a member of the Virginia Conservative Party.

A political bellwether?
Bob Holsworth, president of the nonpartisan VirginiaTomorrow.com, said the national TEA Party movement shows - to some level - what many Americans are feeling.

“While the Democrats have by and large attempted to frame the TEA parties as the invention of political crackpots,” Holsworth said, “my sense is that they reflect a frustration that is felt even more broadly than the people that actually participate in them. And that frustration is a sense that the government in Washington is too large, moving too fast over too many issues.”

Holsworth doubted that the bonfire would have had a direct effect on Perriello.

“He’s gonna get a stiff challenge no matter what happens with the TEA parties,” he said.

Liberal political blogger Ben Tribbett, who runs the popular “NotLarrySabato” blog, called the planned burning “stupid,” but acknowledged that there seems to be much discontent with Perriello in the 5th District after his votes for both health care reform, which angered conservatives, and the Stupak-Pitts abortion amendment, which angered liberals.

“Tom has walked himself into a corner on both sides,” Tribbett said. “... And it doesn’t put him in a great position politically for 2010.”

As for the effigy burning, Tribbett said “it’s like a third-world country to take pictures of someone and go burn it in the street.”

Patricia Evans, a member of the Danville TEA Party, defended the group’s interests in an e-mail to members Monday.

“Many people across America are extremely upset by the actions of our government,” Evans said, “but we must always represent the conservative movement in a strong but respectful manner. Winning over hearts and minds is the only way we will get our country back.

Nigel loves his country and just let his feelings take over in this case.”

Catherine Amos is a staff writer for the Danville Register & Bee.


From earlier

The chairman of the Danville TEA Party Patriots said Sunday he was unsure about whether the group will continue with its planned effigy burning of Rep. Tom Perriello, D-5th District, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a bonfire rally Saturday in Blairs.

Hours after news of the bonfire hit the Internet on Friday, at least one national news outlet had the story on its Web site, among dozens of bloggers. Chairman Nigel Coleman said coverage of and public reaction to the event was “kinda strange.”

“We’ve been getting a lot of flack about this,” Coleman said, “about burning those two in effigy and a lot of people in the public are unhappy about it. The story has gotten so large, it’s kinda strange.”

Coleman sent a news release to local media Friday about the event, which opened with: “In a move sure to spark controversy, the Danville TEA Party will close their ‘Fired Up for Freedom’ rally by burning Rep. Tom Perriello and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in effigy in response to the passage of landmark health care legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.”

But Coleman said Sunday that some members of his group were “uneasy” with the idea of counter-protesters and that people might mistake the TEA Party Patriots for being violent. Coleman compared the event to similar acts of protest in the nation’s history, such as opposition to the Stamp Act of 1765.

The bonfire is still planned, Coleman said, but the effigy burning was in question. However, TEA Party member Patricia Evans wrote in an e-mail to the group Saturday night that “nothing will be burned at our upcoming bonfire except an occasional hot dog.”

“I still would like to do it,” Coleman said, “but it’s still up in the air at this point. We’ve already started stacking firewood and building the effigy …we will have a bonfire. Burning someone in effigy was just gonna be part of it.”

In a news release Friday from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Chairman Chris Van Hollen condemned the bonfire.

“These shocking and despicable acts are becoming all too common at extreme right-wing Republican rallies,” Van Hollen said in the statement. “… While there should be a robust debate about reforming America’s broken health insurance system, violent expressions are beyond the boundaries of a respectful debate.”

Coleman defended the burning, which he said was not violent in nature.

“We were using it as a symbol of how things are similar to that (colonial) period in history,” he said. “Things have gotten out of hand … the more real we get, the more unreal it gets.

“We knew that it would garner attention; we didn’t know how much … People are upset, people are angry. This isn’t just some $100 million bridge to nowhere. This is a fundamental change in the constitution; a fundamental change in America.”

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by J on November 18, 2009 at 10:09 am

Way to back down to the liberal fascists…bunch of pansies.

Flag Comment Posted by packer2dogs on November 17, 2009 at 10:10 am

Baloo…so what are the TeaParty ideas? So far, all I can see is “stop and reduce all spending no matter what.“ Is there something else, maybe a call for more inexpensive health care, maybe some request for Americans to buy American, something?

Flag Comment Posted by packer2dogs on November 17, 2009 at 10:08 am

Hmmm, lablover, just how do you “force” a president to raise taxes? Like Bush 1?

I suspect one doesn’t force a fairly strong president to do anything.

Flag Comment Posted by shoebox on November 17, 2009 at 7:17 am

So, laber and Loo what are the new ideas ?

Flag Comment Posted by Punto di vista di paradigma on November 17, 2009 at 4:53 am

Interesting article:
GOP’s latest foes hail from Tea Party
Republicans in 5 state races may find new fights on their right flanks
By LYNSI BURTON
WASHINGTON BUREAU
Nov. 16, 2009, 9:17AM
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6722358.html

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on November 17, 2009 at 3:53 am

Naturelover keeps repeating the same old ignorant argument every post.  Conservatives were outraged by the spending of both Republicans and Democrats.  If you knew anything about the news or political history, which you don’t, you would know that Conservatives stayed home or voted for Perot during Bush’s second run and gave the WH to Clinton.  Reagan had a Democrat Congress for most of his 8 years in office and Bush 1 was forced to raise taxes by the Democrat Congress he had to contend with.  The only time Democrats ever even considered reforming the budget was when the Republican Congress forced Clinton to sign into law welfare reform which he fought tooth and nail, then later took credit for.

Your lack of insight is typical for most of the left.  The Conservatives have put all kinds of ideas forth and have attacked both parties.  That’s why the Conservative Party in NY should have won the Congressional race there and still may during the recount.  Big-spending George Bush style liberals won’t get nominated anymore in the Republican Party with the new activism that Obama’s socialism is inspiring.  If you’re going to write about anything, you ought to know something about it first.

Flag Comment Posted by Cleocat on November 17, 2009 at 2:49 am

Only republicans would thing tea-bagging was a political term. LOL. I hope they enjoyed tea-bagging each other!

Flag Comment Posted by Baloo on November 16, 2009 at 7:43 pm

Folks,
The Tea Party folks have been offering up ideas. The problem is no one is listening. It is really easy to say they are whining and have no ideas when you haven’t taken the time read or listen to any they have written or said. The media outlets are listening, spinning it, and feeding poeple a line of bull. I see some here are eating it up.

Some of these people have been outspoken for years and no one was really listening then, NO ONE. It took the recent events to awaken such a large number of folks. It was the proverbial straw that broke the camels back not that they were just ignoring it because the GOP was in charge.

Frankly, you are doing the Tea Party goers a favor by ignoring and demonizing them. It will only galvenize their solidarity and you will regret not taking them seriously.

Flag Comment Posted by free2beme on November 16, 2009 at 7:40 pm

Burning in effigy, let’s see, where have we seen that broadcast over and over for many years?.........
Oh yes, that would be anywhere that disagrees with US policy. The news always shows the ‘terrorists’ or ‘infidels’ burning our flag or our president.
What a great idea, imitating our enemies…..I know when I saw them, I was swayed to their way of thinking. Will the teabaggers be selling prayer rugs too?

Flag Comment Posted by jedihunter on November 16, 2009 at 6:24 pm

The problem is no one is willing to stand up and make a decision.  Where are their principles?  Sooo sad.

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