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Tea party pushes for change

BISMARCK - With just weeks to go until Election Day, North Dakota tea party supporters rallied Saturday at the state Capitol to encourage residents to take back the country and "vote the bums out."...

Supporters of the tea party movement
Supporters of the tea party movement rally Saturday in Bismarck to voice their concerns about big government and increased spending. Teri Finneman / The Forum

BISMARCK - With just weeks to go until Election Day, North Dakota tea party supporters rallied Saturday at the state Capitol to encourage residents to take back the country and "vote the bums out."

Between 300 and 400 people attended the event to show their support for fiscal restraint, individual responsibility, sticking to the wording of the Constitution and limited government.

The tea party movement is about average citizens who have had enough of government encroachment in their lives, said Gary Emineth, a speaker at the event and former North Dakota Republican Party chairman.

Grand Forks City Councilman Terry Bjerke said money is being wasted at all levels of government.

"It's time to take back your money and take back your property," he said.

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Bjerke said the U.S. Capitol should move to Grand Forks.

"(They) will have never lived in a place that's that cold, and they'll have to keep their hands in their own pockets," he said.

Robert Harms, president of Citizens for Responsible Government, spoke out against the national debt, stimulus spending, bailouts, entitlement programs and the new health care law.

Tea party supporters also discussed the increased spending by North Dakota state government in recent years and the state's large surplus.

"The state of North Dakota does not have a surplus. It has an overtaxation problem," Bjerke said

Discussing entitlement programs, Bjerke said it's unconstitutional to take money from person A to give to person B.

"What part of this does our congressman Earl Pelosi not understand?" he said, combining the names of Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-N.D., and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

Ross Ueckert of Beach, N.D., told supporters the tea party is about standing together.

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"The Constitution tells us what our government is supposed to do and what our government is allowed to do by you the people. Not me, but us," he said. "Let's stand together for what we believe in and take this dang country back and put it on the path that it needs to go."

North Dakota Democrats and Republicans have also launched their own rallies across the state this month.

Teri Finneman is a multimedia reporter for Forum Communications Co.

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