Sunday, January 8, 2012

The Ron Paul effect: How he is altering Republican primary calculus

Ron Paul can no longer be dismissed as 'fringe' by establishment Republicans. He has the staying power to bring his message to the masses ? and transform the Republican conversation.

Ron Paul?s strong third-place finish in Iowa and second-place showing in New Hampshire polls have galvanized a movement that?s increasingly difficult for establishment Republicans to dismiss as ?fringe.?

Skip to next paragraph

The former Texas congressman is exciting young voters, attracting independents to the ballot box, and bringing in the money ? $13 million in the past quarter.

Whether or not he can ultimately win the nomination ? which most political commentators and even some of his own supporters say is highly unlikely ? Representative Paul clearly has the staying power to needle his opponents with attention-grabbing ads and bring his Constitution-centric message to the masses.

So what, ultimately, might be The Ron Paul Effect?

For one, he?s already changed the conversation to a degree ? in Republican debates and beyond.

?The candidates talk more like [Paul] on taxes and government than they did in 2008,? says Rob Richie, executive director of FairVote, an advocacy group in Takoma Park, Md., focused on election participation and reform. ?Ultimately the nominee is going to have figure out what part of [Paul?s] message can be more of his.?

Paul has campaigned on cutting $1 trillion in federal spending ? something that has perhaps upped the ante on how aggressively other candidates say they?ll cut.

Several polls have asked about whether likely GOP primary voters have a favorable view of returning the US monetary system to the gold standard ? a reflection of how much Paul has championed this idea. He?s also brought to the fore more scrutiny of the Federal Reserve.

Paul has also tapped into deep-seated dissatisfaction with the cost ? in dollars and human life ? of the past decade?s foreign wars.

His perspective has ?deep roots in this country.... His more isolationist view on foreign policy is one that a lot of Republicans have because it goes along with smaller government,? Mr. Richie says.

In the long run, the question is whether those Republican voters who support his views leave the party, or ?does the party have a way to accommodate them?? Richie says.

The Republican Party should be careful not to alienate Paul and his supporters, because ?in a unique way he?s attracting new people to vote in Republican primaries or caucuses that otherwise wouldn?t ... or might go to a third party,? or not participate at all, says Wayne Lesperance Jr., a political science professor at New England College in Henniker, N.H.

For young potential voters ? frustrated with student debt, unemployment, and gridlock in Washington ? Paul is the buzz these days. A lot of students were upset when he canceled an appearance this week at College Convention 2012 ? the young people's forum that Professor Lesperance organizes, and which made news Thursday when Rick Santorum was put on the spot for his arguments against gay marriage.

Of the under-30 vote in the Iowa caucuses, 48 percent supported Paul, according to CIRCLE, the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement in Medford, Mass.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_9P8MLdBJgk/The-Ron-Paul-effect-How-he-is-altering-Republican-primary-calculus

government shutdown sofia vergara jacksonville jaguars jacksonville jaguars iraq war over iraq war over maurice jones drew

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.