The Tea Party
Three Principles

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Explains how the core principles of the Tea Party defines the movement and predicts its effect on the American political landscape.

Language: English
Cover of the book The Tea Party

Subject for The Tea Party

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254 p. · 14.5x22.3 cm · Hardback
In The Tea Party: Three Principles, constitutional law professor Elizabeth Price Foley takes on the mainstream media's characterization of the American Tea Party movement, asserting that it has been distorted in a way that prevents meaningful political dialogue and may even be dangerous for America's future. Foley sees the Tea Party as a movement of principles over politics. She identifies three 'core principles' of American constitutional law that bind the decentralized, wide-ranging movement: limited government, unapologetic US sovereignty and constitutional originalism. These three principles, Foley explains, both define the Tea Party movement and predict its effect on the American political landscape. Foley explains the three principles' significance to the American founding and constitutional structure. She then connects the principles to current issues such as health care reform, illegal immigration, the war on terror, and internationalism.
1. Genesis; 2. Limited government; 3. US sovereignty; 4. Constitutional originalism; 5. Looking forward.
Elizabeth Price Foley is a professor of constitutional law at Florida International University College of Law, where she was a member of the founding faculty. A self-professed 'recovering liberal', she spent several years on Capitol Hill, as a senior legislative aide to two Democratic US Congressmen. She is Executive Director, Florida Chapter, of the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm that litigates constitutional liberty claims. She is the author of Liberty for All: Reclaiming Individual Privacy in a New Era of Public Morality (2006), The Law of Life and Death (2011), and The Tea Party: Three Principles (February 2012).