1: legislation must adhere to the constitution
2: States should join together to fight unconstitutional encroachments of the Federal government on the powers of the states
3: support the 2nd amendment
4: Pass a "read the bill" act
5: oppose the fairness doctrine, or any other name under which speech restrictions might be imposed
6: Reject the Orwellian "Employee Free Choice Act" to remove the secret ballot requirement to start a union
7: Prohibit government funding of advocacy groups; ensure proper voter registration and ID requirements; resist efforts to allow foreigners to vote
8: Oppose any foreign treaties that limit US sovereignty
9: Assimilate legal immigrants into society; change Maine to no longer be a sanctuary state; no benefits or citenzship for illegal immigrants; deport illegal immigrants
10: term limits; no pension for members of congress; congress cannot vote themselves pay raises; congress must use the same healthcare plan as the general public under the same rules; congress must abide by all the laws they impose on the general public
11: Freedom of religion does not mean freedom from religion
12: promote marriage (they include a definition of marriage as between a man and woman); parents make the decisions for their children, not government; "we recognize the sancity of life, which includes the unborn"
13: take the war on radical Islam seriously; seal the border
14: encourage saving and investing
15: cut spending, balance the budget, pay off the debt - "generational debt shifting is immoral"
16: audit the Fed
17: stop political manipulation of economic statistics
18: require the government to follow the same accounting rules as businesses
19: restore the part of welfare reform that was removed with the stimulus bill
20: no cap and trade
21: freeze stimulus spending and apply it to the debt
22: remove roadblocks to energy resource use and extraction, including nuclear
23: implement zero based budgeting
24: "Espouse and follow the principle: It is immoral to steal the property rightfully earned by one person, and give it to another who has no claim or right to its benefits"
25: healthcare is not a right, it is a service, and the healthcare bill is unconstitutional - allow purchase of insurance across state lines, implement tort reform, some Main specific healthcare stuff
26: Eliminate the Dept of Ed and restore full control to local authorities
27: "b. Repeal and prohibit any participation in efforts to create a one world government"
The only things in there that seem to me be a bit "out there" is the part about auditing the Fed (which is a shame*), abolishing the Dept of Education, and the pablum about "one world government". The rest of it seems to me to be policy issues that, at the very least, a significant minority of people would not find objectionable, individually.
By the way, this platform was not proposed by a tea partier.
Mr. Dyer says he and his co-authors aren’t members of the tea party, although some have attended such events. They were motivated by disappointment with the party’s “progressive” wing, which had “forgotten what it means to be a Republican,” he says.
He agrees that the document is vague in parts, but that was because they had expected it to be merely a draft to begin negotiations with less-conservative party members. To their amazement, it passed with the support of not only tea-party groups, evangelical Christians, and Ron Paul libertarians, but also a large number of presumably rank-and-file conventioneers.
Keep in mind that this is Maine, where there actually IS a progressive wing of the Republican party.
If it was a tea party platform, it wouldn't have anything in there about marriage, abortion, or other social issues.
* The Fed is being given greater and greater power to regulate the economy but is not accountable to the electorate. The financial regulation legislation before Congress has the Fed becoming
a regulator, for instance. Keep in mind that the Fed is not part of any of the 3 branches of government. Giving pushback against making the Fed a regulator doesn't seem whacky to me, but those gold bugs who simply want to attack the Fed any way they can because they hate fiat money are not the sort of people to bring
real concerns about the role of the Fed before the public simply because they have little credibility on the issue. It's like a mid 70s Jane Fonda saying she wants to streamline the military's procurement system - you just assume hostility. The "crying wolf" aspect will innoculate the Fed against real criticisms. The Fed should stay what it was designed to be, a central bank whose purpose to maintain a stable currency.