By W. James Antle, III on 8.10.09 @ 6:11AM
Two sons of Ron Paul -- one figurative, one literal -- run for
the U.S. Senate.
The donors who poured millions into Ron Paul's presidential
campaign coffers aren't done yet. On Saturday, libertarian
financier and commentator Peter Schiff raised more than $200,000
in a 24-hour "money bomb" as he continues to explore a bid for
the Republican nomination to run against Sen. Chris Dodd
(D-Conn.).
Having now collected more than $790,000 in campaign contributions
since mid-July, the Ron Paul Republican Schiff is competitive
financially with the frontrunners for the GOP nomination. Former
Congressman Rob Simmons raised $754,000 through June 30 while
former ambassador Tom Foley has taken in $528,000 since mid-June.
Schiff's fundraising haul wasn't the only reason
libertarian-leaning Republicans had to cheer last week. Rand
Paul, the ophthalmologist son of the 11-term Texas congressman
and former presidential candidate, announced he was going to run
for the Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Jim Bunning (R-KY). As
in Schiff's case, the party establishment has other plans -- the
heavy favorite for the GOP nomination is Secretary of State Trey
Grayson -- but Paul is likely to take after his father when it
comes time for his own money bomb later this month.
As Ron Paul Republicans have slowly been making inroads within
the party structure, Congressman Paul himself has been gaining in
influence over the GOP. Every Republican in the House is a now a
co-sponsor of his bill to audit the Federal Reserve. Mainstream
conservatives quote liberally from Paul's reading list, including
Thomas Woods' Meltdown and some of Schiff's work, when
grilling Obama Treasury officials about the economy.
Even on issues of war and peace, Paul isn't always in the
minority anymore. A handful of conservatives who supported the
Iraq war, like Congressman Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md.), have joined
him in questioning President Obama's Afghanistan escalation. All
but five Republicans
voted with Paul against the supplemental funding of Iraq and
Afghanistan, including the entire leadership. They haven't
suddenly become noninterventionists -- the issue for most
Republicans was extraneous spending, not the wars themselves --
but it is nevertheless a major departure from the party's stance
under President Bush.
It is of course the Obama administration and the financial
meltdown that have given Paulian ideas a new resonance, not so
much his dissent on the war. (Though Paul's success in
fundraising and attracting the kind of young voters who have been
fleeing the GOP in droves has had an impact as well.) But efforts
to expand this influence appeared to take a hit when South
Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford was found crying with his mistress in
Argentina. Sanford was a possible
bridge between the Ron Paul Republicans and the mainstream
conservative movement -- and, until his extramarital affair, a
credible 2012 presidential contender.
Now with Sanford likely out of the running, Ron Paul Republicans
will once again have to reach within their own ranks. Peter
Schiff has been an apostle of economic doom who claims
vindication in the current malaise. "Though the worst of the
global financial crisis may have passed," he wrote recently, "the
real impact of the much more fundamental U.S. economic crisis has
yet to be fully felt." That fundamental crisis, in his view, is
the result of massive debt, unsustainable government spending,
and a reckless monetary policy that is undermining the dollar's
strength.
While Schiff advised Ron Paul's Republican presidential campaign,
Rand Paul got his start in politics supporting his father's bids
for public office. In both appearance and speech, he bears a
striking resemblance to the elder Dr. Paul but is somewhat less
old-fashioned. It is hard to imagine Ron Paul saying, as his son
often does, that the Republican Party "has lost its mojo."
Paul and Schiff have very different approaches to the GOP. In a
speech to the Connecticut Libertarian Party, Schiff openly talked
about using it as a vehicle for libertarian ideas because its
electoral debacles make it ripe for a takeover. His theory is
that a leader-less and idea-less major party could be reshaped
faster than a minor party could be made politically viable.
Rand Paul is much more conciliatory toward regular Republicans.
Like Grayson, he said he would not run unless Bunning retired.
When the senator obliged, Paul announced on his Facebook page
that he had "nothing but good things to say" about Bunning and
thanked the outgoing senator for his vote against the bailout
(politely leaving unmentioned Bunning's vote for the Iraq war).
Like his father, Paul is pro-life and would strip the federal
courts of their jurisdiction over abortion.
The younger Paul is careful to present his foreign policy views
in a way that could appeal to Republicans more hawkish than he.
"Defending our Country is the most important function of the
federal government," Paul says on his website. "When we are
threatened, it is the obligation of our representatives to
unleash the full arsenal of power that is granted by and derived
from free men and women." While a defender of Congress' sole
constitutional authority to declare war, he acknowledges that
there are times when the president "can and should make military
responses without Congressional authority."
"As a member of Congress," the statement on his campaign site
continues, "Dr. Rand Paul would have demanded and voted in the
affirmative for a declaration of war with Afghanistan. He would
have demanded and voted against a declaration of war with Iraq."
He is similarly judicious on defense expenditures: "In Rand's
proposed budget, defense spending would represent a larger
percentage of the total budget than it does today, while military
spending on unnecessary programs and unconstitutional operations
would be eliminated."
Do these men have a chance? Several promising Ron Paul
Republicans -- and at least one Ron
Paul Democrat -- won their primaries in 2008 but went down to
defeat. Murray Sabrin finished third in New Jersey's GOP primary
last year. Despite their fundraising prowess, some Paulites have
found fiat currency also to be of little value at the ballot box.
In July, a Quinnipiac poll
showed Schiff within five points of Dodd as the Republican
nominee -- but not registering at all among GOP primary voters.
Like his father, Paul has done well in Internet polls but no
scientific survey has yet tested his viability. Nevertheless,
they are both serious libertarian candidates in competitive
Senate races. No wonder they are taking the liberty to run.
topics:
Conservatism, Libertarianism, Ron Paul