March 12, 2010 11:56 AM

Is the "Coffee Party" the Next Big Thing?

By
Stephanie Condon
Topics
Domestic Issues
Coffee Party

Looking for change, but not quite ready for a revolution? Disappointed in President Obama and Congress, but not ready to turn your back on Washington? Prefer a double, non-foam latte over a cup of Earl Grey? The Coffee Party might be for you.

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Months after the Tea Party erupted onto the national scene at health care town halls, an alternative, more pro-government group of citizens is emerging to say they're angry, too -- they just want less yelling and more talking.

Just as the Tea Party organized to remind the Republican Party what its conservative base stands for, the Coffee Party movement is organizing to represent citizens who believe in government solutions for national problems but aren't necessarily enthralled with Democratic leadership. After gaining steam online over the past few months, the Coffee Party is launching its first national event this Saturday: National Coffee Party Day.

What is the Coffee Party, and How Did it Start?

The Coffee Party is a loosely organized movement that has yet to adopt a platform -- but it has a message that its members feel is resonating across the country.

It started with a Facebook note from Annabel Park, a documentary filmmaker from the Washington area, who felt like venting about the Tea Party. She was inundated with feedback from people who agreed that the Tea Party did not represent the America they knew. The sentiment snowballed into a Web site that attracted 170,000 visitors in its first week and Facebook page that as of Friday morning, had more than 110,000 fans -- just beating out the number fans of the Tea Party Patriots page.

Park explains the movement in an introductory video on the Web site: "We object to obstructionism and extreme political tactics that are, I think, are fear based, not reality based and in many ways just deliberate misinformation," she says. "So we're organizing. We want people to understand that we're voters... We need everyone engaged in the political process. That is the only way our government can function, as an expression of our collective will."

The Coffee Party is about open discussion and deliberation for the purpose of solving common problems. The group welcomes everyone and embraces diversity -- ethnic, geographical and even political diversity. There's one caveat Park gives in her opening statement: "If you don't believe the government has any role, than yeah, you should join the Tea Party."

What's Going on Saturday?

This Saturday, local Coffee Party organizers will hold more than 350 meetings, in nearly every state, for the Coffee Party National Kick Off. National organizers are encouraging local leaders to convene groups of no more than eight people at a local coffee shop to discuss the issues that matter to them.

"We just wanted to find a way to make it fun and bring back that feeling of civic pride that pretty much all Americans had in 2008," Eric Byler, one of the leaders of the national Coffee Party, told Hotsheet. "What I saw was people who were really, really proud to get a chance to vote for John McCain -- after eight years, to vote for a war hero -- and people proud to vote for the first 21st-century, multi-ethnic, citizen of the world candidate. I felt so good about our democracy in 2008... we're just trying to bring people back in."

The groups on Saturday will be encouraged to come to a consensus about what issues matter to them the most. Each group will take a picture at the coffee shop with a sign that reads "coffee and..." with the issue of their choice. National Coffee Party organizers will collect the pictures on their Flikr account to create an "issues mosaic."

Shouldn't Voters Seeking Government Solutions be Happy with Washington Right Now?

The issues likely to come up at Saturday's meetings could very well arise at a Tea Party meeting.

"We want jobs with decent pay for all Americans," the Coffee Party declares on its Facebook page. "We want affordable health care and education. We want our government to cut wasteful spending and practice fiscal discipline. We want regulation of Wall Street to protect consumers and promotion of financial literacy."

The coffee partiers share a lot of the same grievances as tea partiers -- even though they are much more likely to have voted for President Obama.

But the recession hit everyone, explains Frances Lappe, a best-selling author and follower of the Coffee Party movement. Liberals and conservatives alike are hurt by a government that caters more to special interests than its citizens, she said, especially in a time of economic hardship.

Lappe is releasing a second edition of her book "Getting a Grip," which explores the process of creating a "living democracy." The aftermath of the 2008 election compelled Lappe to update her book, which was written during the Bush era.

"I, too, was in some way lulled into the idea that a change at the very top could bring about the kind of systemic, cultural change I believe is very necessary," Lappe told Hotsheet. "Clearly, changing the president is not going to do it. In a way, the disappointment that many have felt is the greatest gift Obama has given us -- to disabuse us of the notion there is a quick fix."

Nothing will change, Lappe says, until power is no longer concentrated in the hands of the few and the wealthy.

Is There Common Ground Between the Tea Party and the Coffee Party?

And that is a goal for which both coffee partiers and tea partiers can strive for, the Coffee Party says -- putting power back in the hands of the people, whether that means wresting it from government or private special interests.

"You work for us, not for corporations," the Coffee Party says in its Message to Congress. "We hired you and we get to fire you. We pay you and give you great health insurance. Now get to work serving the interests of the American people, or get out."

The message appeals for citizens to "discard the labels that obfuscate reality like Democrat, Republican, conservative and liberal... Democracy is not a zero sum game."

Lappe contends that the Coffee Party may even be able to convince tea partiers that government can have a positive role in society. Government size shouldn't count for much, she says, but rather, people should worry about to whom the government is accountable and how it functions.

"Without an accountable government we end up with the big government clean-ups like the Superfund," Lappe said, referring to the federal law designed to clean up abandoned hazardous waste sites. "A government that is accountable is a reasonable size... If you want [government] small, is that before or after we solve the Toyota recall? In a complex society we need a government that is looking out for our interests in a transparent way."

What Happens After National Coffee Party Day?

The Coffee Party is eager to start the debate, but its future remains unclear. After small groups of local coffee partiers meet Saturday to choose the issues that matter to them, the national group expects to come to a consensus on at least some of the issues and propose specific solutions.

Another, hopefully larger, meet up session is scheduled for March 27, according to Byler. During the upcoming congressional recess, the movement plans to hold "Coffee with Congress" sessions where they will invite their representatives to sit down for a cup of coffee with them. The movement has even started "campus coffee" branches at universities across the country and hopes to have a day in April where every college campus will have a "coffee date."

For its second Coffee Party day on March 27, the group is asking people to take its Coffee Party sphere survey, which asks 60 questions about a person's beliefs on a range of issues. The survey creates a visual representation of one's beliefs and political priorities, which the Coffee Party is using to as a consensus-building tool.

"So far only a few thousand people have taken it, but it seems there's a lot more agreement than you would expect watching the steel cage death match that is political television," Byler said. "It's sort of liberating to say, this is how I feel, and I'm not going to be afraid to speak out because there are people organizing around some negative emotions."

Watch today's episode of "Washington Unplugged" to hear about the Coffee Party, health care reform and the Congressional Hockey Challenge:


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Add a Comment See all 179 Comments
by jmbreland March 14, 2010 8:29 PM EDT
Best wishes to the coffee filter gang. All three of them.
Reply to this comment
by lakota2012 March 14, 2010 2:14 PM EDT
MISSION: The Coffee party Movement gives voice to Americans who want to see cooperation in government. We recognize that the federal government is not the enemy of the people, but the expression of our collective will, and that we must participate in the democratic process in order to address the challenges that we face as Americans. As voters and grassroots volunteers, we will support leaders who work toward positive solutions, and hold accountable those who obstruct them.
Reply to this comment
by akw1 March 14, 2010 8:58 AM EDT
The so-called "grassroots" Coffee Party Movement, isn't so "grassroots".

The coffee party is partnered with democracyinaction, a 501(c)(3) organization, (meaning contributions to the latter are tax-deductible) whose motto is "wiring the progressive movement" for "social justice".

Democracyinaction gets its funding from the Open Society Institute (funded by GEORGE SOROS!). Democracyinaction is also linked to wiredforchange whose clients include the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the DEMOCRATIC Congressional Campaign Committee.

http://salsalabs.com/democracyinaction

And, here is Annabel, herself, urging Coffee Partiers to go to this website .........

http://swampbubbles.com/person/annabel-park


The bottom line is that Annabel Park is a seasoned political activist who got frustrated with the fact that the Tea Parties were getting their message heard, and the liberals who support Obama were not.

So, she co-opted the Tea Party's format and told everyone that the intention is to promote "civility in discourse". The fact is, her intention was to amass enough people to get attention in order to promote Obama and his agenda, and get him reelected. She didn't care about civility when she was trashing the Tea Parties, though, and she originally said that her intention was to render the Tea Party obsolete.

If people want the same things Annabel Park wants, that's great - but, everyone who doesn't want to promote and support Obama and his reelection should know that they're being used.
Reply to this comment
by bricko March 13, 2010 5:41 PM EST
Hey Stephanie, now after they have had their Coffee Party, tell the audience how many people showed up.

Tell them it was 30.

Tell them how many showed up at the Tea Party this weekend.

Tell them 2600.

Tell them how many Tea Party folks are going to land on the head of their legislators when they come home for break or if they pass this horrible health care bill.
Reply to this comment
by P0ST1ING_AWAY March 13, 2010 3:09 PM EST
by hateisafourletterword March 13, 2010 1:39 PM EST
So what do you call MSNBC?
==========================================
M-S-N-B-C

Do they SOMETIMES go off the deep end ???
YES.
Do I listen when they do ???
NO.

I THINK FOR MYSELF.
Reply to this comment
by hateisafourletterword March 13, 2010 3:53 PM EST
So it is OK for Olbermann to rant and rave. It is OK for Maddow to lie. It is OK for Matthews to pee on his leg of whatever he does. It is OK for Schultz to rant on about nothing.

Yet heaven forbid that O'Reilly challenges a liberal on an issue. OMG that should be disallowed. I have heard numerous times where O'Reilly has defended the Obama administration. He might lean right, but he is far more centered that any of the 4 people on MSNBC. I shall I call it PMSNBC (no that would be stooping to liberals levels).
by BradNoley March 13, 2010 12:37 PM EST
Take off your Ronnie Reagan spectro vision glasses for once and read the article again. Reagan was pro big business and almost broke the country by feeding big corporations and lobbyist billions of tax dollars in the name of national defense. Trickle down...yeah right. Outa my pockets into their bank accounts. You trying to blame Obama and his supporters for what's wrong with the country. Can you really say that we were doing just fine when the Repubs were in power? Didn't think so. I speak for alot of people, we are sick of Dems, Repubs, Teabaggers, and alike. Stop pointing fingers, lets talk real solutions.
Reply to this comment
by hateisafourletterword March 13, 2010 1:42 PM EST
Cut spending 10%. Deal with the $130 trillion deficit in medicare and social security. EVERYONE pays some income tax. Make the Alternative Minimum Tax the tax on truly wealthy Americans - not just a family lucky enough to make $150,000-500,000 per year. It as designed to tax the Rockefellers and Vanderbilts, now it only hits the people who work hard and make a decent living, but are not independently wealthy. But it generates too much money to fix - ask Rangel.
by rich7292 March 14, 2010 12:52 AM EST
To talk real solutions we need intelligent informed people not morons who do not have a clue. So just go away idiot. It is so easy to spot a liberal.
by HGOODGUY March 13, 2010 12:26 PM EST
JUST ANOTHER "AXE TO GRIND" PARTY!!
Reply to this comment
by CelebrateBarackStation March 13, 2010 11:55 AM EST
Coffee Party Mission: Stand by and do nothing while government takes over every facet of your life.

By the way, the 2 founders mentioned are well-known Democrat party activists (CBS refuses to report this...)

---------------------
When CBS stops promoting Democrat talking points and Big Government I will change my name from...CelebrateBarackStation
Reply to this comment
by P0ST1ING_AWAY March 13, 2010 11:24 AM EST
by hateisafourletterword March 13, 2010 11:18 AM EST
It is FOX News. Try to not defame all the time please.
==============================================================
When they start offering news that does NOT have a
right-wing-nut agenda attached to it .........
I WILL STOP CALLING IT > FAUX NOISE <
Reply to this comment
by hateisafourletterword March 13, 2010 1:39 PM EST
So what do you call MSNBC?
by P0ST1ING_AWAY March 13, 2010 11:21 AM EST
by TelesforoDeSanAnto March 13, 2010 9:56 AM EST
After a year of listening to Tea Party messages, I have decided they have very little to offer to the future reconstruction of our country. The party of NO reserves has bankrupted the country .............................
========================================================================
You are discounting the fact that the TeaBaggers have given hope
to NUMEROUS Southern Trailer Park residents.
Reply to this comment
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