David Hogg Is Now in Serious Trouble at the DNC
President Trump Kicks Off May With So Much Winning
There’s a Very Simple Reason Democrats Have to Hate John Fetterman
Jon Karl's Frequent Liar Miles
Bad Political Theater in Newark
The Democrats Just Can't Stop Pushing Nonsensical Assault Weapon Bans
VX Antisemitism
Buckle Up Buttercups, the New Golden Era has Begun
Trump Wants an Iron Dome to Protect Us – but Is One GOP...
Sean Duffy: Biden and Buttigieg Ignored Warning Signs at Newark Airport
Tim Tebow Exposes Disturbing Details of America’s Child Exploitation Crisis
Reporter Exposes Dems' Politicizing: ICE Facility Tour Reveals Clean, Well-Equipped Center
Judge Greenlights Trump Policy: Allows IRS to Share Tax Data With ICE to...
Homan Says Newark Mayor Arrested for ‘Storming’ ICE Facility ‘Not Very Smart’
DHS Launches Investigation Into California Over Providing Benefits to Illegal Aliens
OPINION

Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert's Big Tea Party Spoof

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Comedian Jon Stewart's "Restoring Sanity" rally pokes fun at overzealous political activism, but it's hard not to see how it doesn't attack the Right more than it attacks the Left. After all, "Restoring Sanity" is a direct play on Glenn Beck's "Restoring Honor" event just a few weeks ago, and the format of Stewart's event is taken directly from the tea party rallies held over the past year or so.

Advertisement

Should tea-partying conservatives actually take offense?

It depends who you talk to.

“What these guys are about isn’t so different than what we are about,” said Adam Brandon, vice president of communications for FreedomWorks, which was responsible for organizing the 9/12 rally as well as helping mobilize for Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” event. “I would guess if you polled these guys, they’re not that excited about higher taxes or bigger government. So even if there’s some anti-tea party stuff there, perhaps there are some commonalities.”

That opinion is quite different than the one expressed by Sally Oljar, a national coordinator for the Tea Party Patriots, a limited-government grassroots activist group that has assisted with several events over the past year.

“I am reminded of Gandhi's advice: ‘First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win.’ Mr. Stewart and Mr. Colbert are comics and do not address issues substantively,” said Oljar. “Mockery is a tactic, not an answer. They are desperate to stop the change that's coming – the showdown, so to speak.”

The event on October 30 is expected to draw upwards of 60,000 people, and will feature a counter-rally from comedy host Stephen Colbert, who is spoofing Stewart’s spoof with his own “Restoring Fear” campaign. Stewart has suggested signs such as "9/11 Was An Outside Job,” and "I'm Not Afraid of Muslims, Tea Partiers, Socialists, Immigrants, Gun Owners or Gays, But I am Kind of Scared of Spiders."

Advertisement

Those sorts of signs didn’t really hit Seton Motley’s funny bone. Motley is the President of Less Government, a nonprofit group in D.C.

“One of the premises of this Jon Stewart-Stephen Colbert pseudo-Woodstock is to denigrate to the tea party movement and conservatives,” said Motley. “Their calling it a rally to ‘restore’ sanity implies that the TEA Party and Glenn Beck rallies have been un-sane.”

Other conservatives insisted that there was nothing to be afraid of – that the event was simply capitalizing on something for raw economic benefit.

“People will show up for a free show anytime there is a celebrity involved. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert figured out how much the Restore Honor rally boosted Glenn Beck and figure they could do the same thing,” said Judson Phelps, head of Tea Party Nation, who has held various tea party activist events throughout the year. “I think it is more of a joke than a political rally, but whatever floats their boat!”

Dean Nelson, head of the Fredrick Douglass Foundation, took an approach similar to Colbert’s when giving his take on “Restoring Sanity” – that is, he combined skepticism with humor.

Advertisement

“I am proud to live in a country that could produce or attract comedians as clever and entertaining as Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert,” said Nelson. “Although I personally plan to be involved with get out the vote efforts, I can think of no better way for liberals to spend the weekend before the election than attending this fine event."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement