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politics and politicians Title: Why Ron Paul is winning the GOP primary Just 15 seconds into a question-and-answer session with reporters Wednesday morning, Ron Paul found a way to work in a mention of the Austrian School of economics. From there, he moved inexorably through the Paul oeuvre: the need for the gold standard, the problem with energy-efficient light bulbs, why Greece should declare bankruptcy, why Grover Cleveland was his favorite president, and how our economy is collapsing just like the Soviet system. I mean, how many people have read Human Action? the Republican presidential candidate asked, referring to an economic treatise from the 1940s by one Ludwig von Mises. How many people have studied Mises and Hayek and Rothbard and Sennholz?
A lot of people just flat out dont understand what Im talking about. Hes right about that. Rarely does a man go far in public life hawking the sort of oddities that the gadfly from Texas does. And yet, in a sense, Ron Paul is winning the 2012 Republican presidential primary. Paul wont be the president, or even the party nominee, but that was never his goal. He aimed to shift the debate toward his exotic economic theories, and by that standard he has prevailed. The former obstetrician fathered the Tea Party. His son won election to the Senate. Republican leaders in Congress have joined Pauls crusade against the Federal Reserve. And his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination are stealing his ideas. The success of this message, Paul said over his bacon and eggs at Wednesdays Christian Science Monitor-sponsored breakfast, is way beyond my expectations. Who wouldve ever dreamed that, after 100 years, wed be talking about the Federal Reserve at debates? I mean, this is fantastic. A few weeks ago, the Post ombudsman questioned why the papers reporting on Paul had been so sparse. To this, there are two answers. Last time, in 2008, Paul was ignored because his ideas sounded crazy. This time, hes being ignored because his ideas have become commonplace. Whats changed is not Paul but the party: Nearly a quarter-century after he quit the GOP to run for president as a Libertarian (he told me years ago that it was an academic exercise), he has brought the Republicans to him. That may or may not be a good thing, but Paul has proven that issues can triumph. His campaigns have been absent of personality his or anybody elses. When I asked him at breakfast about photos showing Texas Gov. Rick Perry getting in his face at a debate, Paul downplayed the conflict: Its a friendly tap, punching the guy in the chest, he explained. Asked about Perrys description of the Fed chairmans actions as treasonous, Paul deflected: [Ben] Bernanke isnt the problem. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 is the problem. Toward the end of the hour-long session, he observed: I dont know if Ive said anything negative about the president since Ive been here. Probably not, because I usually dont. Indeed, he hadnt. Instead, he delivered his trademark message of doom. Were in a big mess, he began. Personal liberty is under attack. Our financial system is under attack. Matter-of-fact observations continued: Our foreign policy is a shambles.
Weve consumed our wealth.
We are destroying our currency
. Total failure.
Its all going to end. In between the apocalyptic predictions came quirky libertarian tidbits, such as the Austrian economists predicted [that] the artificial pseudo-gold-standard wouldnt last, and a draft is an enslavement. Asked which Democratic president he most admired, Paul instead offered up the late H.R. Gross, a Republican congressman who once tied the House in knots. Thats a revealing choice, because Paul cares more about theory than power. I have one goal in life politically, he explained, and the goal is to make this a better country, change economic policy, change foreign policy, change the monetary policy and explain to people why we have booms and busts. Actually, thats five goals, but Paul says his ambition is being realized. The issues have come our way, he said. The attitude of the whole country is shifting in our direction. Exhibit A: A letter sent Monday by Republican leaders to Bernanke urging the independent body not to stimulate the economy. It shouldve been said about 30 years ago or 40 years ago, Paul said. Exhibit B: Perrys treason talk. Was Perry co-opting Pauls anti-Fed message? Co-opting might be a little bit strong, but, yes, he knows what people are thinking about, Paul said. Thats how politicians operate.
I think it reflects the changing attitudes. For Paul, that is validation enough.
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