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Ron Paul
See other Ron Paul Articles

Title: Slowly But Surely, The Republican Party Is Coming To Ron Paul
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.buzzfeed.com/zekejmiller ... the-republican-party-is-coming
Published: Jan 18, 2012
Author: BuzzFeed
Post Date: 2012-01-18 11:00:03 by christine
Keywords: None
Views: 504
Comments: 38

MYRTLE BEACH, South Carolina—South Carolina State Sen. Tom Davis is your basic early state prize: A credentialed up-and-comer, former chief of staff to the governor, conservative to the bone.

The setting for his endorsement Sunday, an unremarkable conference room in the cavernous Palisades Conference Center, was the familiar press conference stage.

But this event was a little different from the others: Rather than bored reporters and blasé staffers, it was witnessed by a throng of young supporters, who cheered and stood on their edges of their chairs, clapping and chanting in support of their chosen candidate.

And this was not a standard presidential candidate, but a sometimes-zany 76-year old Texan who has run twice before, but who is for the first time this cycle gaining a real foothold in the Republican Party.

“We can’t just have good enough. We can’t have incremental steps. Incremental steps have grown our deficit to $2 trillion every year,” Davis told the packed conference center ballroom. His rejection of incrementalism applies not just to economic policy, but to his choice of candidate as well.

“We need radical surgery, not aspirin,” he added in his introduction of Paul.

Davis’ endorsement is the latest small step in a largely unremarked trend of mainstream Republicans backing the libertarian icon. With the backing of well-regarded local figures like Davis – Paul has picked up a steady trickle of state legislative endorsements from Idaho to Iowa to South Carolina -- to warm words from party icons like Sarah Palin, Paul has pulled off one of the trickiest moves in politics, crossing over from the fringe. And while Paul hasn’t come far enough to win his party’s nomination, this run will leave him the kind of legacy in the party that has allowed past also rans – Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole, John McCain – to return; in this case it could provides his son, Senator Rand Paul, the organization he’ll need to mount his own bid for the White House.

The support of a new conservative counter-Establishment has also injected Paul's ideas -- from cutting foreign aid to going back to the gold standard -- into the Republican Party's bloodstream. Once beyond the pale, they're now part of the conversation. And while he may go away, and his son's political future may be uncertain, the ideas may be here as long as is the young, libertarian generation he brought to presidential politics.

The credit for Paul's endurance lies, at least in part, with Mitt Romney. The frontrunner is barely an aspirin for a conservative base holding its head at the thought of another Obama term as evidenced by a long list of tea partiers and others who are still looking past Romney for a candidate.

Former South Carolina GOP Chairman Katon Dawson told BuzzFeed Monday that even if they warm to Romney, that’s not enough. “That conservative base out there — they are the kerosene your pour in the fire to beat the liberals,” he said. “They like him. You’re going to have to have heat, passion. Republicans don’t just have to like a front-runner – they have to love him.”

Many don’t.

Radio and online television host Glenn Beck has said he’d only vote for Romney “If I had a gun to my head” — which is only half a step above his steadfast opposition to Newt Gingrich. “I might consider Ron Paul as a third party,” he said last month.

Sarah Palin took the side of Romney’s attackers last week, calling on the former Massachusetts governor to prove his claim that he created 100,000 new jobs while at the helm of Bain Capital.

“Gov. Romney has claimed to have created a 100,00 jobs at Bain, and people are wanting to know, is there proof of that claim and was it U.S. jobs created for United States citizens? … And that’s fair,” she said on Fox News last week. “That’s not negative campaigning — that’s fair to get a candidate to be held accountable to what’s being claimed.”

She publicly defended Paul in November, calling on the media to give him airtime.

Then earlier this month she argued that Paul is pro-Israel, saying "he just wants to go about that [protecting them] in a different way."

South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint told conservative radio host Laura Ingraham last week that the attacks on Paul were harming the search for the anti-Romney candidate.

“I think one of the things that have hurt the so-called conservative alternative is saying derogatory things about Ron Paul,” he said. “I don’t agree with him on everything, but he is right about the out-of-control and unaccountable Federal Reserve. He’s right about the need for limited constitutional government and the importance of individual liberty.

Palin and DeMint are merely flirting with Paul; few contemplate that they would endorse him in what appears likely to be a long twilight delegate fight through the spring. Some conservatives also say the nod toward Paul is largely about keeping Romney from abandoning them entirely.

“I don’t see any conservative or tea party effort to stop Romney emerging if he’s the nominee,” Greg Mueller, a former Pat Buchanan and Steve Forbes advisor, told BuzzFeed. “Will some conservatives endorse other candidates in South Carolina? Yeah, but we’re still in the primary.”

And Romney’s best friend in his combat with Paul is, ultimately, the incumbent.

“I think at the end of the day, the Obama fear factor really kicks in here. Conservatives think Obama is the most dangerous president in American history, and that is going to be a rallying mantra once the primaries and caucuses get finished.”


Poster Comment:

“I think one of the things that have hurt the so-called conservative alternative is saying derogatory things about Ron Paul,” he said. “I don’t agree with him on everything, but he is right about the out-of-control and unaccountable Federal Reserve. He’s right about the need for limited constitutional government and the importance of individual liberty.

(and most important, foreign policy, dude)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

#8. To: christine (#0)

Though I refuse to participate in the FEDERAL FRAUD, I still think Ron Paul could've defeated Obama. I think he was the only Republican candidate that could have siphoned off enough of the anti-war, youth vote to get the job done.

He just couldn't beat the republican elites.

noone222  posted on  2012-11-28   9:46:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: noone222 (#8)

I think he was the only Republican candidate that could have siphoned off enough of the anti-war, youth vote to get the job done.

He just couldn't beat the republican elites.

I disagree in part. I agree that he would have siphoned off the anti-war and youth vote, however, I disagree that it was the Republican elite he couldn't beat. IMO, it was the Republican grassroots he couldn't defeat.

The grassroots of the Republican Party are state-worshiping war mongers who hated Ron Paul with a passion. If Paul had won the primary, I think he would have lost two grass roots Republican voter for every anti-war, youth vote he received.

I can't count the number of people on the Internet and in person who stated they would vote for Obama before they voted for Ron Paul. That's how much the grass roots of the Republican Party hated his message.

The Republican party and it's grass roots aren't about small government and liberty. They are about controlling their neighbors, protecting Israel at all costs, increasing warfare-police state spending and lowering taxes so their children and grand-children can pay for it all at a later date.

Fibr Dog  posted on  2012-11-28   11:53:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 13.

#17. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

The Republican party and it's grass roots aren't about small government and liberty. They are about controlling their neighbors, protecting Israel at all costs, increasing warfare-police state spending and lowering taxes so their children and grand-children can pay for it all at a later date.

I think that's a pretty accurate description there FibrDog. You forgot to mention though about the ultra-rich tychoons who wish to take away school lunch programs so that they can pay a few percentage points less on their yearly multi-billion dollar income, while they receive taxpayer money for their trillion dollar bailouts.

FormerLurker  posted on  2012-11-28 13:10:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

You could easily be right. The 2 party scam should force a tax revolt by those dissatisfied with war and monetary tyranny.

noone222  posted on  2012-11-28 13:36:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

hi Fibr Dog! so nice to see you again. it's been too long. hope all is well with you.

christine  posted on  2012-11-28 13:42:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

I can't count the number of people on the Internet and in person who stated they would vote for Obama before they voted for Ron Paul.

Gawd, now that's some good thinkin'.

Esso  posted on  2012-11-28 13:49:15 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

If Paul had won the primary, I think he would have lost two grass roots Republican voter for every anti-war, youth vote he received.

Righhhhhttt. And the grass roots Republican voters would have voted for Bammy instead?

Oh that's right, the Dem Party stands for small gov't and liberty. The Dem Party did not vote for the Patriot Act or its reinstatement. The Dem Party is against war for Israel and that's why the Dem Party voted against the Iraq War and against the expansion of the Afghan War and against the Libyan War and are not funding or weaponizing the "rebel" AQ Muslim Brotherhood who are attacking Syria. And it's the Dem Party that is against the police state - in fact the Cyber Police leg was signed off by A Ghost President. As far as lowering taxes, how can any party "best" the Dem Party who is trying its hardest to add more people to the 47% who don't pay taxes because they're on the gubment dole of some kind?

Yes indeed the Republican party is the bad party whereas the other is all sweetness and light and quite opposite to the Pubbies.

Give me a friggin' break.

scrapper2  posted on  2012-11-28 14:15:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: Fibr Dog (#13)

I can't count the number of people on the Internet and in person who stated they would vote for Obama before they voted for Ron Paul. That's how much the grass roots of the Republican Party hated his message.

i had the same experience with a number of R acquaintances. they really feared RP's foreign policy position.

christine  posted on  2012-11-28 17:43:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

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