From Politico.com:
 
Hoping to recapture the grassroots energy  of last month’s “tea parties,” Republican Govs. Mark Sanford of  South Carolina and Rick Perry of Texas will host a tele-town hall Thursday  that’s being dubbed “Tea Party 2.0.”
The Republican Governors
Association said it is expecting 30,000  people to participate in the town hall, which will take place roughly  one month after the much-publicized anti-tax tea party rallies held  in hundreds of locations across the country on April 15, the tax filing  deadline.
Sanford and Perry will each speak for  several minutes before opening up the town hall to up to an hour-long  question and answer session.
RGA Executive Director Nick Ayers said  that while the effort Thursday will be on a smaller scale than the April  tea party rallies, it still represents “a great opportunity to mobilize  that support.”
Both Perry and Sanford are favorites  among the tax-averse tea party attendees.
Sanford, who attended a tea party in  Charleston, gained national notice for his high-profile battle with  the White House over his resistance to federal stimulus funds designated  for his state. The fate of those funds remains undecided as Sanford  continues to battle with state lawmakers over how much of the $350 million  in funds allocated for South Carolina his state will accept.
 
Perry spoke at three tea parties across  Texas and helped promote the rallies during numerous radio and television  interviews prior to the events.
The Texas governor generated widespread  publicity after endorsing a state House resolution reaffirming the state’s  sovereignty, a veiled shot at the president’s stimulus package.
 
“I believe that our federal government  has become oppressive in its size, its intrusion into the lives of our  citizens, and its interference with the affairs of our state,” Perry  said at the time.
Perry drew praise from the conservative  media for the move, but was widely derided by the left for suggesting  that Texas may consider seceding from the union in protest of the stimulus.
 
Ayers said both governors “heard the  frustration” of the tea party attendees and “understand that our  Republican governors are the best positioned to lead on these issues."
 
The RGA, Ayers said, is hoping to use  the town hall as a springboard for organizing support and fundraising  for key gubernatorial races this year in Virginia and New Jersey.
 
