I was reading some of the latest status updates on my Facebook a little while ago and ran across something I thought was a little interesting. A Fan page for The Coffee Party. Say what? So naturally, my curiosity got the best of me and took a peek. But that was after I contacted my friend, Gareth Fenley, who sent me the invite to be a Fan in the first place. Gareth and I share similar interests in the mental health arena. After reading the brief amount of information on the Fan page, I went to a New York Times article that really captured my attention. Part of title of the article had two words that fit who I am and have been about for years – civic participation. I knew they were talking my language. And the other part is that civic participation is a key component of my new book slated to be released in early May 2010. So as I read further in the article I realized that I had to share this with you. The article can be read below. Enjoy!
Coffee Party, With a Taste for Civic Participation, Is Added to the Political Menu
By KATE ZERNIKE
Fed up with government gridlock, but put off by the flavor of the Tea Party, people in cities across the country are offering an alternative: the Coffee Party.
Growing through a Facebook page, the party pledges to “support leaders who work toward positive solutions, and hold accountable those who obstruct them.”
It had nearly 40,000 members as of Monday afternoon, but the numbers were growing quickly — about 11,000 people had signed on as fans since the morning.
“I’m in shock, just the level of energy here,” said the founder, Annabel Park, a documentary filmmaker who lives outside Washington. “In the beginning, I was actively saying, ‘Get in touch with us, start a chapter.’ Now I can’t keep up. We have 300 requests to start a chapter that I have not been able to respond to.”
The slogan is “Wake Up and Stand Up.” The mission statement declares 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 we face as Americans.”
Local chapters are planning meetings in cities from Washington to San Antonio to Los Angeles (where there have been four in the last month.) The party (coffeepartyusa.org) is planning nationwide coffee houses for March 13, where people can gather to decide which issues they want to take on and even which candidates they want to support.
This summer, Ms. Park said, the party will hold a convention in the Midwest, with a slogan along the lines of “Meet Me in the Middle.” The party has inspired the requisite jokes: why not a latte party, a chai party, a Red Bull party? But Ms. Park said that while the Coffee Party — and certainly the name — was formed in reaction to the Tea Party, the two agree on some things, like a desire for fiscal responsibility and a frustration with Congress.
“We’re not the opposite of the Tea Party,” Ms. Park, 41, said. “We’re a different model of civic participation, but in the end we may want some of the same things.”
The Tea Party argues for stripping the federal government of many of its roles, and that if government has to be involved, it should be mostly state governments.
“The way I see it,” Ms. Park said, “our government is diseased, but you don’t abandon it because it’s ill. It’s the only body we have to address collective problems. You can’t bound government according to state borders when companies don’t do that, air doesn’t. It just doesn’t fit with the world.”
Still, she said, “we’ve got to send a message to people in Washington that you have to learn how to work together, you have to learn how to talk about these issues without acting like you’re in an ultimate fighting session.”
Ms. Park and chapter organizers said they would invite Tea Party members to join their Coffee counterparts in discussions. “We need to roll up our sleeves, put our heads together and work it out,” she said. “That’s, to me, an American way of doing this.”
Born in South Korea, Ms. Park moved to Houston when she was 9 and worked in the taco stand her parents bought there, which she said helps her understand average Americans.
“We encountered racism, yes, but the majority of people were kind, they were good people, they were like our family,” she said. “I understand where they are coming from.”
Eileen Cabiling, who founded the Los Angeles chapter, said she had campaigned for President Obama, but paid little attention to politics until the Tea Party convention and Mr. Obama’s State of the Union speech, where he rebuked Congressional Democrats and Republicans alike for their inability to move on legislation.
“I had withdrawn in campaign fatigue,” Ms. Cabiling said. “I was like, what happened?”
Only 2 people came to the first meeting, she said, but 30 came Sunday, including some Tea Party members, who she said could agree with their more caffeinated counterparts on some things.
“This is about recognizing that the government represents us,” Ms. Cabiling said, “so we need to step to the plate and start having a voice and start acting like bosses.”
Helen, I am going to watch this develop. You know I understand the concerns of the Tea Party but question the methods at times. To have a left version of the same would be equally suspect but we will see.
I don’t see this, at first blush, as the same as the Tea Party. I do see it as a mechanism for people to voice their concerns which the Parties obviously are NOT giving the masses an opportunity to do. I also see the Tea Party movement as a mechanism for people to voice their concerns as well. But I shall also keep my eye on them and see how it progresses.
Great blog! You allow the reader to see what the Coffee Party is all about! Between the Tea Party and the Coffee Party Dems&Repubs better wake up because independent thinking/voting/party affiliation is BECOMING A NORM!!!!!
It’s amazing what a difference four years make. In 2006, I ran as an Independent for a House Seat. Over thirty people throughout the state had intentions of running as an Independent, but found the process to be too arduous and they either decided to not run at all or simply claim one of the two majority parties and run in that way. After all was said and done, I was the ONLY person in the State of Georgia to get on the ballot that year as an Independent after securing the required number of valid signatures from registered voters in that district. Ballot Access is another hot topic that we’re hearing in Georgia and all over the U.S. But I’m glad the message of independents and independent thinking is becoming the norm. Frankly, it’s the Democrats and Republicans fault (primarily elected officials), because if they were doing what the voters have asked them to do over the years, there wouldn’t be such an outcry from their constituents on so many fronts. President George Washington knew the two party system was going to bring problems. And he was right.