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Most of the rally-goers were already faithful tea party activists, and it will take a lot more than just them to make real waves at the polls, acknowledged Tea Party Patriots co-founder Mark Meckler. "We want to fire people up today, so that then they'll go out and get the new people," Meckler, of Nevada City, Calif., said backstage at the Sacramento event. Tea Party Patriots claims to be the nation's largest tea party group, with 2,700 chapters, including at least 175 in California. Beck and another tea party favorite, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, spoke to a crowd in Anchorage, Alaska, late Saturday
-- the ninth anniversary of the terrorist attacks -- and discussed their feelings about that day in 2001. "Here we are so many years later, and I fear we are forgetting," Beck said. Party activists reject characterizations of their movement as an extension of the GOP, but the vast majority of its members are Republicans and independents who vote Republican. But not Mary Jane Corcoran, a 58-year-old from Dayton, Ohio, who made the 360-mile trip to St. Louis to show her opposition to big government. "I've sort of gotten away from being a Republican or a Democrat," she said. "I'm just a conservative."
[Associated
Press;
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