Is Ron Paul a Stalking Horse for Romney?
Steve Deace (in www.Townhall.com) presents a very sober argument to what is a growing belief that
there is something funny happening in this election. There is nothing illegal
suggested here but raises some very interesting questions. Ron Paul’s
presidential web site spent a great deal of space denying the accuracy of the
arguments presented here. The immutable fact is Paul dropped a saddlebag full of
campaign cash on a severe attack on Rick Santorum which was plays totally in
Michigan where he is not campaigning at all.
We’re republishing the article
for your own edification.
~~~Moe Lauzier
Feb 25, 2012
At this point donors to
the Ron Paul campaign should just go ahead and make out the check to Mitt
Romney instead in order to cut out the middle man.
And I’m only half-kidding
when I write this.
That’s because it has
become obvious that that Paul campaign is more interested in aiding and
abetting the Republican Party nominating its weakest and least principled
candidate than it is trying to promote its own candidate. The latest prima
facie evidence to support this premise is the Paul campaign’s decision to
invest money running a 30-second negative ad about Rick Santorum in Michigan,
despite the fact Paul has never actually campaigned there.
Now the negative ad the
Paul campaign is running against Santorum is basically true. Santorum has voted
for too much big government during his legislative career, which is one of the
reasons I didn’t endorse him and why conservatives en masse have taken so long
to warm up to him. Where I come from, it’s not an attack if it’s your record.
But that’s beside the
point.
Why is Paul investing
resources in a state he’s not actually campaigning in? And why just invest
those resources to go after Santorum and not Romney, who (according to
Townhall.com finance editor John Ransom) represents the very crony capitalism
Paul rightly criticizes?
The media has been
noticing for weeks the strange symbiotic relationship between Romney and Paul,
with Paul’s campaign running interference for Romney on the campaign trail.
I’ve even witnessed pro-Paul activists on Twitter re-tweeting tweets and
articles that are pro-Romney. Funny thing is Paul and Romney are probably the
two Republican candidates that are the most diametrically opposed
philosophically if you look at the records and not just the rhetoric.
Which begs the question:
what in the world does a crony-bailout-stimulus capitalist like Romney – who is
also the father of government mandates and advocates the sort of timid targeted
tax cuts the Democrats typically push – have in common with a professor
emeritus of the Ludwig Von Mises Institute such as Paul?
The answer is pure
Realpolitik.
Either the Paul campaign
is engaged in the dumbest strategy to promote a presidential candidate since
Lyndon LaRouche’s disciples handed out pamphlets in airports, or it’s time to
admit the Ron Paul campaign of 2012 is really the Rand Paul campaign of 2016.
Since I know Paul's campaign people are not only not dumb, but some of the best
political operatives in the business, I’m going with the Rand Paul option.
The Paul people are smart
and don’t lack for resources. He’s been the best consistently funded candidate
in this race other than Romney, yet they’re using those resources in a way that
helps Romney more than Paul. And that’s because they’re smart enough to know
that a quirky near-octogenarian whose stage presence makes William Hung look
like Cary Grant isn’t getting elected President of the United States—no matter
how great some of his ideas may be.
The Paul campaign also
doesn’t believe there’s any way Romney can win a general election. I know, because
some of them have actually told me this. They believe Romney (like election
losers Ford, H.W. Bush, Dole, and McCain before him) is a malleable
establishment candidate that won’t fire up the conservative base, and his
history of firing people as a successful businessman will be successfully
exploited by the class warfare tactics of the Left.
The Paul campaign sees
another four years of Obama as just the prescription for what the nation needs,
because they believe the country needs a radical paradigm shift that it
probably won’t be willing to embrace until there’s no other alternative but
insolvency.
They might actually be
right about that last part. It’s doubtful the country can afford another four
years of Obama in the short run, but it’s also doubtful the country can afford
to carry this much debt and phony money in the long run regardless of who is in
the White House.
The Paul campaign is
taking the long-term view, seeing the more charismatic, likeable, and
socially-conservative Rand Paul as the superior standard-bearer for their
revolutionary message. The movement surrounding Paul sees Ron Paul 2008-2012 as
analogous to Barry Goldwater in 1964 and Rand Paul 2016 as analogous Ronald
Reagan 1980. Goldwater’s defeated 1964 campaign was where Reagan’s conservative
star first shined nationally, remember, laying the groundwork for future
victory.
This is why the Paul
campaign has become a stalking horse for Romney. It’s why they blistered Newt
Gingrich in Iowa, and now they’re doing the same to Rick Santorum in Michigan.
They want Romney to be the nominee and lose to set the stage for Rand Paul in
2016. If Iowa remains the first in the nation caucus state for that cycle Rand
will be step ahead of other GOP future stars, because he’ll inherit his
father’s outstanding organization in that state.
Furthermore, one of Paul’s top political operatives was just elected chairman of the Republican Party of Iowa.
Furthermore, one of Paul’s top political operatives was just elected chairman of the Republican Party of Iowa.
Regardless of whether you
view this as a cynical or sound strategy, the Paul campaign owes its donors and
supporters an answer as to why it applies Laissez-faire to the Romney campaign
as well its fiscal philosophy.
Steve Peace
Steve Peace

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