By W. James Antle, III on 10.15.07 @ 12:08AM
Ron Paul faces very long odds -- and big, young crowds.
ARLINGTON, Virginia -- It's not unusual to see 300 young
professionals and college students lined up trying to get into a
Clarendon bar and grille on a Thursday evening. But last week, the
crowd wasn't there (just) for a night of beers and camaraderie --
they had come out to see Ron Paul, the ten-term Texas congressman
and maverick candidate for the Republican presidential
nomination.
Also on hand were camera crews from ABC News and C-Span. Nobody
seemed more surprised by the attention than the candidate himself.
"I asked how many people belonged to this club," he told the mostly
standing-room anti-statists, "and they said 'oh, about 35 people.'
I'm used to speaking for little groups of 35 people."
Now Paul is getting used to speaking to crowds as large as the
2,000 people who came out to hear him talk about fiat money -- no
joke -- and foreign policy at Michigan State. There's hardly an
Internet poll he hasn't won and his campaign beat expectations by
raising nearly $5.1 million in the third quarter, putting Paul
within a Mike Huckabee of John McCain. If Paul isn't yet a
frontrunner, he is at least a cult favorite.
Paul is much more at ease in front of a friendly audience than
at the Republican presidential debates, where he must answer
questions with Rudy Giuliani cackling in the background and trade
elbows with his more hawkish rivals over the Iraq war. He smiles
cheerfully and even shows flashes of wry humor. ("We're not going
to get rid of the Federal Reserve in a day -- it'll take two or
three days.")
And Paul couldn't have asked for a friendlier audience. The
event was organized by the Robert Taft Club, a group of young,
D.C.-based paleoconservatives (full disclosure: I was paid a modest
fee to speak at a past meeting). They applauded each time he called
for abolishing a government program or closing a military base
overseas, and prefaced questions with, "When you become
president..."
Paul's real goal may be even more audacious than trying to get
to the White House -- reviving an older conservatism that is more
skeptical of military interventions and restoring the Robert Taft
wing of the Republican Party. Paul admits that the latter more or
less died with Senator Taft during the Eisenhower administration,
though he sees the Facebook friends who come out to support him on
the campaign trail as proof it can be resurrected.
Even Congress's libertarian happy antiwarrior must know this is
a tall order. In a year where the Republican primary ballot will
feature a tax-cutting pro-choicer and a tax-hiking pro-lifer, Paul
could have plausibly run as a fusionist candidate. An implacable
foe of both the IRS and abortion, he would shutter more federal
agencies than Republicans dared dream in 1994 while marrying social
conservatism to consistent federalism.
Paul praises his following as "diverse," but says they can get
along because they "want to leave each other alone," a throwback to
the pro-gun, anti-tax Leave Us Alone coalition that has since been
supplanted by national greatness conservatism. He animatedly
invokes the Constitution and American Revolution as he promises, "I
don't want to run your life. I don't want to run the economy... I
don't know how."
BUT THE BIGGGEST SINGLE driver of Paul's support in this campaign
is also what limits his appeal to conventional Republicans -- his
passionate opposition to the Iraq war and what he describes as the
"illegal, unwise, unconstitutional military adventurism" of the
Bush administration. The title of his talk was "A Conservative
Foreign Policy," but no amount of readings from Taft or Russell
Kirk can alter the fact that most people who today call themselves
conservatives would regard Paul's preferred foreign policy as
naive, even dangerous.
In addition to withdrawing from Iraq as quickly as possible,
Paul would shed American commitments in Europe, Asia, and
throughout the world, spending the savings at home -- as a down
payment on the transition costs away from the welfare state. He
casually drops the phrase "military-industrial complex," which,
though used by Eisenhower, is usually associated with the
post-McGovern left. What many Republicans consider essential to
U.S. security in an age of terrorism, Paul dismisses as "war
propaganda."
For this reason, GOP presidential candidates have been quick to
use Paul as a foil for demonstrating their own toughness. And
Paul's backers don't much like the rest of the field. Anti-Giuliani
cracks abounded; a South Carolina supporter urged Paul to challenge
Huckabee to a fight for questioning the Texan's commitment to
national security. Paul beamed but demurred, saying, "I sorta like
nonviolence." Asked what his administration would do to help
rebuild Iraq, Paul said he'd favor such expenditures if he could
only tax "the neocons" and "war supporters" to pay for them.
Since that taxable group still includes a majority of
Republicans, can Paul gain traction? His supporters hope for a
breakthrough in New Hampshire, which has a libertarian streak, or
Iowa, where according to one poll 51 percent of Republicans want to
leave Iraq within six months.
Basking in the applause of intense young paleos and
libertarians, Paul didn't seem worried about what would happen to
his own campaign. "I am not the greatest orator," he acknowledged.
"But this is the greatest message."
topics:
Foreign Policy, Trade, John McCain, Abortion, Constitution, Military, Iraq, NATO, Conservatism, Oil