Emmet County’s chapter of Taxed Enough Already is hoping to draw up to 1,000 people to its latest demonstration at 6 p.m. Friday, May 1, in Petoskey’s Pennsylvania Park.
Harbor Springs resident Tom VanHaaren last attended a Tax Day Tea Party in Troy, and is hoping to bring together anyone who is “outraged that Washington has spent us into oblivion.” With an emphasis on being an action-group, VanHaaren’s goal is to help others get involved on their own through phone calls, letter writing and even forming their own committees.
“People don’t need to feel helpless,” he said.
Although the group’s criticism is leveled at Congress and the Obama administration’s stimulus package, VanHaaren pointed out the group is non-partisan.
“This is a passionate, patriotic group of people. We want to take a step back and stop the spending,” said VanHaaren. “A large majority of people who voted in the last election didn’t sign up for an $11 trillion deficit. If that number would have been brought up, I think they would have stopped and thought before they cast their vote.”
In that vein, the group invited Samuel Joseph "Joe the Plumber” Wurzelbacher to attend the Friday evening event. Wurzelbacher has become a staple at the Tea Parties, attending the February one in Washington, D.C., as well as the Tax Day Tea Party in Lansing among others. Despite becoming a key cog in the final month of the GOP presidential campaign last year, Wurzelbacher echoed the sentiment that the Tea Party is not in line with any specific political orientation.
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http://www.petoskeynews.com/articles/2009/04/30/news/doc49f998f8e1276621739635.txt