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John Boehner, Newt Gingrich Targets Of Occupy Protesters

John Boehner Occupy Protesters

By LAURIE KELLMAN   12/ 8/11 06:43 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- It wasn't the slick suits, pricey heels and sense of purpose of the congressional staffers that Susan Wilkinson saw this week on Capitol Hill. What stung about crossing paths with them, she said, was this: "They wouldn't make eye contact with us," the unemployed Seattle activist recalled Thursday. "When did I get invisible?"

Wilkinson was among hundreds of angry Americans who streamed through Washington and its corridors of power this week to command attention for the 99 percent of Americans that protesters claim are struggling to survive the recession. They were hard to miss.

Dozens were arrested for disrupting traffic. Others crashed a campaign fundraiser for Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich. Their fist-in-the-air chants – "We are united" – echoed through the canyons separating the Capitol's office buildings.

The message to the power brokers: They should be making laws for people who can't afford lobbyists. Much of it was taken from the Democrats' playbook, like extending unemployment insurance, and making wealthy people pay more taxes.

"Things have reached a boiling point," observed protester Ed Vining, a small businessman from Boise, Idaho, who took photos of his fellow protesters passing in near silence in front of the Capitol. "This (protest) is as American an act as you can imagine."

Their top target: House Speaker John Boehner, the Ohioan from modest roots they accuse of making law to benefit of the richest 1 percent while nearly 1 in 10 American workers is unemployed.

Fresh off a night of political party-crashing, the protesters carried their message as close to Boehner as they could get, marching from a Senate park across the East face of the Capitol to a sidewalk outside his personal office building.

"One: We're unemployed! Two: We are united! Three: Tell the speaker we're not leaving," they hollered. From the terraces of the House building across the street, business-suited people watched and took pictures.

Boehner's office responded that he "understands that the American people want a government that listens to their concerns and works together to help create a better environment for job growth" and that the House would "continue to work to do just that."

Dozens of police officers on foot, bikes and motorcycles kept a watchful eye, and eventually the crowd moved down the street, back toward their home base on the National Mall, under white event tents that the Service Employees International Union had helped provide.

Wednesday night, a few had dropped in on a candlelit fund raiser for GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich at one of Washington's most stately hotels. "Hey you millionaires, pay your fair share!" they chanted.

Many others shut down the city's K Street lobbying corridor at rush hour. More than 60 were arrested.

The protesters late Thursday moved to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce building, site of a Christmas party expected to draw prominent lawmakers. The demonstrators staged a "human red carpet," by lying in front of the entrance. The idea, organizers said, was to force Washington's well-heeled partiers to tread upon the less fortunate.

The movement even followed much of the Republican political world to Iowa in advance of the Jan. 3 nominating caucuses.

"Put people first! Put people first!" the protesters yelled at an event in Des Moines featuring New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is supporting former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Christie laughed. "Work it all out, work it all out of yourselves," said Christie. "You know what? We're used to dealing with jokers like this in New Jersey all the time."

The protesters say there's nothing funny about being out of work, or of struggling to pay bills and reading about corporate titans who bring home eight-figure pay checks.

Wilkinson, a 65-year-old a former administrative assistant who's lost her home and declared bankruptcy, said she was wearing her friend's boots because she couldn't afford her own. She said she felt the first real anger when she heard politicians saying the unemployed should blame themselves for their problems.

On Capitol Hill, she looked at the congressional staffers and thought, "God, I miss that. I miss having something I'm responsible for," she recalled, like a job.

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WASHINGTON -- It wasn't the slick suits, pricey heels and sense of purpose of the congressional staffers that Susan Wilkinson saw this week on Capitol Hill. What stung about crossing paths with them, ...
WASHINGTON -- It wasn't the slick suits, pricey heels and sense of purpose of the congressional staffers that Susan Wilkinson saw this week on Capitol Hill. What stung about crossing paths with them, ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Gaylord P Farqua 08:21 AM on 12/09/2011
The ordinary citizens of this nation became invisible once the "employees" of 1-3% took control of the White House and Congress in 2000 with Gomer and THE DICK calling the shots. The only chance to stop the momentum of the robber barons plundering in the nation came with the Democratic Congressional victories in 2008 which the typically disorganized Democrats commenced to blow. Their unwilling to act caused  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
plmyfinger
A life without knowledge is death in disguise
11:02 AM on 12/12/2011
its about time
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Quiet Riot
10:53 AM on 12/12/2011
Boehner and the GOP will create all kinds of new jobs for the U.S. just as soon as we get rid of all the EPA regulations, worker safety regulations, unions and minimum wage requirements. This has been their main objective of late as the voice of the American public gets louder. And of course Christie is used to here desperate people beg for GOOD jobs, the economy of his state is in as bad of shape as Detroit or worse.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dragontech
Looking for a good micro-bio
11:44 PM on 12/12/2011
Actually, their goal has been to eliminate those protections ever since the protections came into existence, and that is no joke. They won't be happy until slavery is back but no longer limited to just African Americans, but ALL Americans that currently earn less than $10,000,000 per year.
realitybaby
Livin in realitybaby!
09:31 PM on 12/11/2011
really Mr Christie? The unemployed are Jokers to you? Really? mmm, looks like this will b your last term in office - c who the joker is then.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Novelist56
Without research, all things are lies!
11:38 AM on 12/11/2011
What did King Glover tell them to do?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Novelist56
Without research, all things are lies!
11:36 AM on 12/11/2011
All of the Republican clowns should be kicked out.

Reduce Unempolment by 50 weeks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RichieB
Science is true whether you believe it or not
10:49 PM on 12/10/2011
Boehner is definitely one of the people that the Occupiers should be protesting against. He has led the republicans to block any kind of reform bill, held up unemployment benefits and protected all the special interests from Wall Street to the Health Insurance industry. However, they should be careful that they don't make him cry.
06:41 PM on 12/10/2011
TO AMERICA :

PLEASE JOIN US AT WASINGTON DC 12/12/2011 at 10:00 AM I and 117 FELLOW VETERANS WILL JOIN US AS WELL

Thank You Hope To See You There
12:05 PM on 12/10/2011
OWS - keep up the great work. Go after Boehner, Cantor, McConnell and any the presidential candidates every chance you get - make them see that we, the people, are not on their side of what our country needs. They are so wrong with their ideas and need to be shown the door - make them run like the rats they are.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
demsrsilly
Proud to be non union
09:08 AM on 12/10/2011
The drum circle people are not hassling nancy pelosi or harry reid?
09:49 PM on 12/09/2011
These CLOWNS need to be unemployed in 2012!
Sooner would even be better.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
09:10 PM on 12/09/2011
"Christie laughed. "Work it all out, work it all out of yourselves," said Christie. "You know what? We're used to dealing with jokers like this in New Jersey all the time.""
--------------------------------------------------->

Christie is incredibly crass, ignorant and arrogant. It's unbelievable that he would insult the people of his home state the way he does. I wonder if the people of New Jersey are okay with that?

What he doesn't get or doesn't care about is his attitude is indicative of the arrogance and distain that the republican party holds for the working people of America.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atravelinturtle
insideofadog,it'stoodarktoread
11:30 PM on 12/09/2011
When Christie speaks and acts this way, I always think of his children and wife. How he must humilate everyone in his family.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Martha Fair
05:24 PM on 12/12/2011
Agreed ...his arrogance is only exceeded by his weight
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sandy Hammer
perpetual student
03:40 PM on 12/09/2011
IMO, from both observation and experience, that there is a form of "institutionalized sociopathy" which pervades many of our power bases. The social and ethical standards, that most of us observe, are discarded in favor of maintaining privilege and superior status. Difficult to make eye contact when one is a part of this dysfunctional culture.
03:30 PM on 12/09/2011
From: http://www.marksquotes.com/Founding-Fathers/Adams/

Government is instituted for the common good; for the protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness of the people; and not for profit, honor, or private interest of any one man, family, or class of men; therefore, the people alone have an incontestable, unalienable, and indefeasible right to institute government; and to reform, alter, or totally change the same, when their protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness require it.

-- John Adams, Thoughts on Government, 1776
01:31 PM on 12/09/2011
You wanna know when the 99% became invisible, here you go (warning article is a bit long but definitely worth reading):
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/how-the-gop-became-the-party-of-the-rich-20111109
01:44 PM on 12/09/2011
Great article and a real eye-opener to boot! It's an insightful piece on the GOP's recent and not-so-recent history and how past actions have influenced its modern downfall.
01:48 PM on 12/09/2011
Yes, agreed.
03:27 PM on 12/09/2011
Thanks! I've posted that link here on this site so many times that the edges are frayed. It's good to see someone else posting it.
12:59 PM on 12/09/2011
After a day of being invisible, go back the next day and start waving money, or perhaps wearing clothes made of dollar bills. THAT will get their attention, and they will give the money that hungry look. A few pictures of that will be worth 1,000 words.