Beverage metaphors abound as liberal Coffee Party activists rise up to counter the Tea Party Movement while Nancy Pelosi suggests that some House Democrats may have to drink hemlock to pass health care reform.
“We’re not here just to self-perpetuate our service in Congress,” she said yesterday, pointing out Congressional opposition to Social Security and Medicare decades ago. “We’re here to do the job for the American people.”
Pelosi’s followers face possible political suicide in November if they turn up the heat, as she urges, to produce “in a matter of days” final legislation to serve up, but the Speaker is undeterred.
“When we have a bill,” she says, “you can bake the pie, you can sell the pie. But you have to have a pie to sell.”
Whether voters are ready to swallow anything from Congressional ovens these days is iffy, even as public reaction to Tea Party conservatism arises in the form of Facebook exchanges and face-to-face organizing of Coffee Party chapters to channel discontent into another direction.
“You’re dealing with a nation that’s jaded, paranoid, distrustful, broke, angry,” says an organizer, “it’s like they just woke up from an eight-year meth binge. We’ve become so polarized. Once we say our political affiliations, everyone goes to their corner and then comes out swinging.”
Coffee Partyers propose to offset with energetic civility what Frank Rich decries as “The Axis of the Obsessed and Deranged” that leads a Republican Congressman, fruitcake Steve King of Iowa, to celebrate the murder-suicide of a “tax protester” flying a plane into a Texas office building of the Internal Revenue Service, “an agency that is unnecessary,” exulting that “when we abolish the I.R.S., it’s going to be a happy day for America.”