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Eminentoes

A Principled Maverick

Can an exception rule? The case of Rep. Ron Paul.

In Congress party discipline is vital. Leadership craves a tight ship where all hands can be counted on to row in the same direction. So many congressmen bridled when, after stressing the need for everyone to pull together to get a conference bill through, then-Speaker Newt Gingrich invoked a “Ron Paul exemption,” granting the gentleman from Texas’s sprawling 14th District a hassle-free bye on the vote.

This story is part of the growing legend of Ron Paul, the Exceptional Republican. Though his name rarely appears in the national press, and his face almost never on Sunday morning news shows, in 1996 he was third only to Gingrich and Bob Dornan in individual contributions to Republican House candidates. While he hasn’t managed to get any of his own bills out of committee since re-entering the House in January 1997, he’s considered a vital asset by a large national constituency of libertarians, goldbugs, and constitutionalists. He’s defied one of the holy shibboleths of electoral politics — Thou Must Bring Home the Bacon — by being a consistent opponent of agricultural subsidies in a largely agricultural district, and he’s still won twice in a row.

Ron Paul has been defying standard political rules since he first won an off-term House election in 1976 — a post-Watergate year when new Republicans weren’t widely embraced. He lost the regular election in ‘76, but came back to win in ‘78, ‘8o, and ‘82, then left the House for an ill-fated go at the Senate seat won by Phil Gramm.

He capitalized on the support he’d won among devotees of hard money and very limited government and worked on a newsletter, coin business, and his own think tank. He also returned to the medical practice he’d left behind. He ran for president on the Libertarian Party ticket in 1988. He was a hero to a national constituency of hard-core skeptics about the State — the one successful politician who was always steadfast even on the less-popular aspects of the live-free-or-die libertarian philosophy. He’d talk about ending the federal drug war when speaking to high school students. In 1985, he spent his own money to fly and testify on behalf of one of the first draft-registration defiers to go to trial, not blanching when confronted with the hot-blooded youngster’s use of the phrase “Smash the State.” He might not use that verb, the sober obstetrician and family man said, but from his first-hand experience with how the U.S. government disrespects its citizens’ natural liberties, he could under- stand the sentiments.

Being against draft registration isn’t so radical these days — 232 House members voted to end it this year. But Paul, whose cardinal rule in politics is, If it isn’t clearly authorized by the Constitution, don’t vote for it, can always be counted on to explore the most exotic frontiers in defense of small government. Since returning to Congress, he’s introduced bills to eliminate the Federal Reserve, withdraw from the United Nations, and repeal the entire body of antitrust law. Paul embraces the term “noninterventionist” to describe himself — “no government intervention, not in personal life, not in economic life, not in affairs of other nations.” (He was staunchly against U.S. military adventures in Kosovo and Iraq.) His constitutionalism sometimes leaves the Air Force vet flying solo, the one vote against the House. He was the solo opponent to granting Rosa Parks the Congressional Medal of Honor (no offense to the fine lady, but the Constitution authorizes no such actions or expenditures); against the latest law about computerized child-support records; and against the most recent reauthorization of the Child Nutrition and WIC program.

His intransigence leaves him more respected than mocked; most of his colleagues express admiration for him as a person and a principled politician, even if they’d never dream of going his way on his pet issues. But in a go-along to get-along atmosphere like Congress, where does being a principled maverick get you?

In Paul’s case, it got him one committee assignment he wanted — Banking. Banking and monetary issues are Paul’s main political passions. His early interest in politics was sparked by the libertarian economics of Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard. He heeds their lesson that inflation is a monetary phenomenon. Just because the consumer price index isn’t rising doesn’t mean inflation isn’t a problem. Paul sees the recent stock market boom as an inflationary bubble. He warned Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan during one of his appearances before the Banking Committee that he might want to get out while the getting’s good, sterling reputation intact. He thinks Greenspan’s Ayn Randian-libertarian background means Greenspan probably suspects what Paul knows: The bubble will soon burst.

His maverick stance also got him one committee assignment he didn’t want — Education and Workforce, in lieu of the International Relations he craved. “Education is where they figured I could do the least harm,” Paul says. He thinks his opposition to all foreign aid under any circumstances blocked him from International Relations. And maverick or not, he still has the congressional bully pulpit from which to express opinions that would not be aired in Congress were he not there, like his declaration that he, and many Americans, had reason to fear being bombed by their own government in the wake of Waco.

His national constituency loves him for it. Most of his personal contributions come from outside his district, nearly 15,000 fans across the nation willing to open up their wallets for his sake. Some eager acolytes from Illinois launched a Web-based campaign encouraging Paul to run for president as a third-party fusion candidate on both the Libertarian and Reform Party tickets. While this effort has so far received scant attention, it isn’t entirely out of left field. Eric Dubiel, mastermind of the effort, was inspired by Reform Party Chairman-elect Jack Gargan’s suggestion that Paul would be a great Reform candidate.

Paul’s office denies any interest on Ron’s part, though he’s flattered. One Paul insider insists Gargan has called Paul numerous times to discuss Reform possibilities. Gargan, as a party leader who should be above nomination fights, cagily denies any special interest in a Paul candidacy, despite telling Reuters that Paul was “at the top of my list.”

Still, it isn’t likely to happen. Even if it did, it would doubtless make no dent in the two-party political machine. Burgeoning national cult aside, Ron Paul is still one of 435, and a misfit within his own party.

PAUL WAS SLAPPED in the face with his lack of standing in 1996 when he challenged recently turncoated former Democrat Greg Laughlin for the GOP nomination for the 14th District, a monser district stretching from Texas’s Gulf Coat over 22,000 square miles skirting the Austin, Houston, and San Antonio metro areas. The Republican Party came out in force for Laughlin, with big National Republican Congressional Committee support, personal appearances by everyone from Newt Gingrich to both George Bushes, and a nasty campaign implying Paul would support heroin in public schools, if only he believed in public schools. Paul thinks such outside interference helped him raise his unusually high, for a House race, $2 million in ‘96. “Every time someone from Washington came down here, I’d send out another fundraising letter and get another $100,000.”

Nowadays, both Paul and GOP leaders deny any animus was involved, though Paul still makes asides about “establishment Republicans [who] want to dance on my political grave” in his fundraising letters. The official explanation is that the GOP craved Democratic defections, and needed to prove the party would go to bat for them. At the time, though, Laughlin insisted that “Republicans who have worked with Paul are appalled he is in this race. When they hear about his wacko ideas, they get even more concerned.”

Paul insists there are no hard feelings, and it’s hard to find GOP colleagues who will openly say bad things about him as person or legislator. Still, he isn’t much of a coalition-builder. Mike Holmes, a Texan and treasurer of the Republican Liberty Caucus, which supports and advocates more libertarian-leaning Republicans of Paul’s ilk, thinks Paul is a victim of his past as a complete outlier in the Congress of the late 70’s and early 8o’s. “Ron’s not the type to reach out with other congressmen and form alliances. He crafts legislation and it goes to committee and gets squashed. He doesn’t want to work the back rooms of Congress. Since he’s not into patronage and pork, he lacks the motivation to make these deals. Congress isn’t made up of individualist heroes, it’s made up of deal brokers.”

It’s hard to see what kind of deals Paul could make on bills such as the one he proposed to abolish the Fed. Jim Leach, chairman of the Banking Committee, says Paul is “perhaps the most philosophically thoughtful and personally decent member of Congress. We don’t vote the same way, but he’s the nicest guy around.” Bill Goodling, the Education and Workforce chairman, says — and one can almost see the bemused smile between the lines of his written statement — that Paul “has brought a different perspective to the Committee…. [H]e sticks to his own moral compass, and political considerations do not influence his decisions on how to vote…. He is very predictable: If proposed legislation expands government or involves activities which he does not consider specifically authorized by the Constitution, then he will vote No.”

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About the Author

Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason magazine and author of This is Burning Man (Little, Brown).

Letter to the Editor View all comments (13) |

TLP| 11.16.12 @ 7:57AM

You left out: Fckng Douchebag. You forgot Piece a Sh*t, and how he Published "Jews Suck" and "How to Kill Ni**ers" Magazines.

You left out all of the PORK that his District Recieved out of his @ss, while, in Public, he Vehemently Denounced such Larceny, from the other side of his Mouth.

Did you mention that one Word from this Latter Day Jim Koresh, could have sent all of his Mindless Zombies to the Polls on Election Night, and Prevented 4 More Years of Accelerated National Suicide?

He's Nothing, and he's Nobody.

He's a little Weasel, and I don't trust his Kid.

Other than all that?

I think he SUCKS.

TheGr8Goat| 11.16.12 @ 11:17AM

Mindless Zombies? Really? I'll go 1-on-1 with you intellectually any day of the week.

Most of Paul's supporters are very intelligent. It's the lower-functioning among us, like you, that don't understand what he stands for. The morons and the statists, that is. They would rather point out the few inconsistencies in his life than argue the points of his beliefs. That is a progressive trick. Do you really think you can get by with that on THIS site?

Bring it on, TLP. Let's talk about what Dr. Paul believes--not your pathetic, childish, progressive tactics.

That said, I don't trust his kid either but I trust his kid more than I do Boner or McCunnel.

Alan Brooks | 11.16.12 @ 11:39PM

Ron Paul is honest;
Romney would say anything to get elected.

Rhoetus| 11.18.12 @ 11:45AM

Gingrich is a political whore, that's why I didn't/wouldn't vote for him.

C. Vernon Crisler | 11.16.12 @ 8:26AM

Ron Paul makes a lot of sense when he's talking about economic issues. You can't go far wrong in relying on Mises or Rothbard when it comes to economics.

The problem is that in just about every other thing Paul stands for, he and his fellow Lew Rockwell loons are a danger to Reagan's vision of a strong America. They hate the state so much they gag at Reagan's peace-through-strength view of foreign policy. They look on McGovern as their patron saint. Paul says they hate us because we're over there, whereas Reagan knew they hate us because we're over here.

Ron Paul and his fringe supporters are the right-wing version of Proudhon and Bakunin. The faster they are out of the Republican Party, the faster the Party will return to its conservative values.

TheGr8Goat| 11.16.12 @ 11:18AM

Define "Conservative values" as you use it here. I don't think you know what it means or our definitions differ dramatically--and I bet mine has more historical legitimacy than yours.

C. Vernon Crisler | 11.16.12 @ 2:37PM

How do you define them?

aware| 11.16.12 @ 5:11PM

You actually think the Republican Party used to be "conservative"? And you think it can be? Been keeping up with any current events?

Reagan left Beirut, which was the 2nd best thing to do(1st being not going there at all). He also left with the Leviathan bigger, spending more, and borrowing more. A trend unchanged to this day.

One day soon both Nationalists and Socialists are going to find out what an economic term known as bankruptcy means not only for your worship of the State and its false sense of security and fairness, but all the way down to the moments of your personal life too.

The Nationalists won't budge a penny on the Garrison State, and the Socialists feel the same about the Nanny State.

You are right about one thing, Paul's supporters do hate the State. That's because they understand the State. You don't because you still think that the "right" people running it would change its abuses into benefits. A "Reformer".

The State loves "reformers" because "reforms" must be implemented, enforced. That requires personnel, offices, badges, and guns. After war, "reform" is the best way the State grows, takes, controls and ultimately destroys.

No need to worry about we anarchists, we have no designs on taking over to wreck your precious system of cronyism backed with funny money and debt. We are just pointing out the inevitable doom inherent to something that defies the laws of nature and natural law. What you support is ultimately unsustainable.

Simon Templar| 11.18.12 @ 11:33AM

"we have no designs on taking over to wreck your precious system of cronyism backed with funny money and debt."

Really? Then we see no value at all in you. Then why all the whining about it? Actually, we were hoping you would aid in helping us stop the cronyism, corruption. If that is the case then what are you proposing?

aware| 11.18.12 @ 5:26PM

You don't want to stop cronyism, you only want it under your management. As has been proven every time you win an election. How many Depts. did you end under Bush? Or the Gingrich congress? Or Reagan? What would be the excuse for why nothing was ended or cut?

How many budgets did you cut when "conservatives" were in charge?

You "wanted" our help? By changing the rules? Denying delegates? The GOP proved itself for what it is, a supporter of the Status Quo. And most importantly, no friend of liberty.

Just be honest and admit you are a Statist. You just hate it when your "team" isn't running it. Keep your "big tent" which panders for Hispanic votes but doesn't seem to have room for libertarians or Paul supporters.

Rhoetus| 11.18.12 @ 11:43AM

Congress passes laws, the president can only suggest, the only response to object is a veto. How many vetoes did Bush41 or Bush43 use? The Republicans have become a "me too" party once more. If it weren't for the Tea Party and Rand & Ron Paul the "Conservative Movement" would be dead politically.

Simon Templar| 11.18.12 @ 11:11AM

Yes, please tell us what Ron Paul thinks. Particularly tell us his foreign policy and social issue positions beyond "Legalize All Narcotics" and "Blame America for Everything and We have no Real Enemies." When you are done there, an accurate description of what modern libertarianism believes or spouts. That, I know, will be a bit difficult as there are about ten different and conflicting versions, but give it a shot please.
Seriously, educate us.

aware| 11.18.12 @ 5:33PM

We want you to give up your false god, the State.

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