Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Grassroots Energy

Sizing up the electoral impact of the local Tea Party and Occupy movements

Jacob Jones
Occupy Spokane organizers say the movement helped shift the public debate.
Occupy Spokane organizers say the movement helped shift the public debate.
Occupy Spokane organizers say the movement helped shift the public debate.

While most have laid down their banners and bullhorns, organizers from both the regional Tea Party Patriots and the Occupy Wall Street movement believe they have helped channel political energy into Northwest campaigns this election season.

Pam Stout, a Tea Party organizer in North Idaho, says the group has played a significant role in defining the issues candidates and constituents discussed as they went to the polls.

“What we have done is really open people’s eyes,” she says.

Former Occupy Spokane organizer Wayne Spitzer says the Occupy movement similarly forced a new debate on issues of financial inequality, corporate privilege and social justice.

“I think that’s been huge,” he says. “I think it’s helped bring attention to things that were left out of the conversation. ... It brought a lot of people into the political process.”

Neither group existed during the 2008 election. Both grassroots movements grew from the frustration of the recession and both claimed to speak for the unheard masses. From opposite ends of the political spectrum, they offered the average person a doorway into activism.

Stout argues the Tea Party has brought thousands of people into its discussion regarding the role of government and fiscal responsibility. The group has also pushed for more accountability for public officials, forcing lawmakers to reconsider their platforms and voting decisions.

“When you vote, you have to look at somebody’s record,” Stout says. “You have to be awake.”

Some efforts have gone further, with the Tea Party helping leverage several fresh candidates into office during the 2010 mid-term election. Washington state Tea Party coordinator Woody Hertzog says the group does not specifically endorse candidates, but it will lend support to some races that share their political priorities.

He says the group has flown extra Tea Party members into the state several times this year to help certain candidates, both Republican and Democrat, canvass neighborhoods or phone voters.

Compared to 2010, “We have significantly more people involved,” he says. “[But] it’s hard to say what the actual impact will be.”

Spitzer says the local Occupy effort has had its greatest success in simply bringing like-minded people together for the community good. He said many Occupy Spokane protesters later volunteered for campaigns or local nonprofits after getting their first taste of activism at an Occupy rally.

“Everybody just found their own little thread,” he says of the group’s outreach to other organizations.

Brian Davenport, a doctoral candidate at Gonzaga University, says his research on the Occupy movement shows it has largely fallen out of the national conversation. But, like Spitzer, he believes the movement helped many people find their way into politics, increasing voter engagement and volunteerism.

The Occupy protests did not have the clarity of vision that the Tea Party has, Davenport says, but they have launched many smaller efforts and work groups that may leave a lasting effect on the community or influence future elections.

“I think those working groups are going to spin off into important things,” he says. “We’ll start to see other movements pop up that had their genesis in the Occupy movement.” 

Also in News

Calculating Crimes

Spokane police say new efforts have slowed the rise in property crime rates, which have increased since 1985 despite national trends

Jacob Jones, Lisa Waananen |
Wednesday, June 12,2013

Drip, Drip, Drip

Why the city of Spokane pumped 4 billion gallons of water it never used last year

Heidi Groover |
Tuesday, June 11,2013

Going into Overtime

Lawmakers in Olympia are still trying to make a deal; plus, a yet-to-open school hits a snag

Deanna Pan, Daniel Walters |
Tuesday, June 11,2013

PHOTO ESSAY | Generation Screwed

The odds are stacked against young people these days. So, what are local grads planning to do?

Young Kwak, Heidi Groover |
Tuesday, June 4,2013

Specializing Education

A passionate teacher turned North Central High School into a haven for genuine scientific research; now the district wants to do the same with other subjects

Daniel Walters |
Tuesday, June 4,2013

Also By Jacob Jones

Stop the Music

How the SPD shut down the Knitting Factory

Jacob Jones |
Tuesday, February 19,2013

Violins Gently Weep

Pay cuts at the Spokane Symphony; plus, prioritizing the city’s arts department

Heidi Groover, Joe O'Sullivan, Jacob Jones |
Tuesday, October 23,2012

Line of Fire

To some, the AR-15 is a symbol of American freedom. To others, it’s a weapon of mass destruction

Jacob Jones |
Tuesday, January 15,2013


 
 
Close
Close
Close