The Tea Party emerged from a laudably grassroots base: libertarians, fervent Constitutionalists, and ordinary people alarmed at the suppression of liberties, whether by George W. Bush or Barack Obama.
I went and hung out at a foot fetish party, and I knew that was a very popular fetish to have, but I didn't realize how amazing it would be to have it.
The lack of fiscal responsibility is one of the main reasons I finally left my old Party.
The Democratic Party is on the move across the country. Voters are responding to our message of progress and fiscal responsibility.
I remember my Republican Party as fiscally conservative, as caring about the environment.
The Republican Party once could lay claim to the mantle of being the fiscally responsible, or 'Daddy,' Party.
The Republican Party is too fixated on this fiction of electability.
We've changed in the sense that we flipped - and this is no longer the Republican party of Lincoln. This is the party of suppression.
I think what the Tea Party movement is - I'm all for it; they're out there fighting for our rights, fighting for what our forefathers stood for.
They urged me to take up winter quarters at the forks of the Platt, stating that if I attempted to advance further until spring, I would endanger the lives of my whole party.
Party machinery is not a fortuitous development, but is the direct result of the requirements of practical politics. The necessity of nominating candidates for offices leads inevitably to the development of caucuses and conventions.
Incumbents are safe, but party majorities are not. This fosters symbolic votes, message politics and little serious legislating in Congress.
The new year 2015 will be a year of great significance, in which we will mark the 70th anniversaries of national liberation and founding of the Workers' Party of Korea.
I am a registered Democrat who is determined to return my party to the proletarian principles of the Franklin D. Roosevelt era.
I think Democrats made a mistake running away from liberalism. Liberalism, uh, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, John and Robert Kennedy - that's what the Democratic party ought to reach for.
The Republican Party and the conservative free market movement have been presidentially focused for too long.
You can have solid third party politics, but the problem is you're all lumped in to all the fringe groups. That's a stereotype that happens.
Searching is half the fun: life is much more manageable when thought of as a scavenger hunt as opposed to a surprise party.
I've always done party building and party fundraising.
When I was in office the fundraising was done by the party treasurers.