No,
Really
by Rick Fisk
by Rick Fisk
DIGG THIS
While it
represents less volume than responses stating agreement with my
view of Ron Paul’s electoral chances, a portion of the emails I
have been receiving represent a belief that I am overstating the
case. I get a few telling me that there aren’t enough facts to support
the case. I’m deluding myself and others or am simply naïve.
I was surprised
that there are still some cynics represented amongst Ron Paul’s
supporters. I imagine them pacing back and forth, wondering if Dr
Paul has a realistic shot at winning the GOP nomination. "Does
this Fisk guy really believe what he’s saying? Where’s the polling
data? Where’s the real evidence? When is it okay for me to take
the plunge? When will it be the right time so I don’t look like
an idiot optimist acting out of irrational exuberance?"
I see it as
obvious, though I was a cynic prior to Ron Paul’s Presidential bid.
I prefer optimism. It’s easier on the circulatory system. On the
other hand, there is evidence and it’s fair to ask.
Polling data
is what seems to concern the doubters. Low polling numbers would
appear to be an indictment. Last quarter in New Hampshire, Ron Paul
was polling at 2% in those polls which included him.
This quarter,
a recent poll in New Hampshire shows Ron Paul with 6%,
22% of those being black voters. That represents 66% increase over
last quarter’s poll numbers. Where his competitors are just jockeying
for position, Ron Paul is gaining significantly. By the way, in
2000, only 10%
of Black voters gave Bush the nod.
I’ve previously
written about the way these polls
are conducted and their usefulness in predicting outcomes (they
can’t by definition). However, there is historical data that also
tends to support the idea that early polls are not reliable predictors.
In 2003, prior
to the New Hampshire and Iowa primaries, Al Sharpton was beating
John Kerry in the polls 5% to 4%. Kerry went on to win both primaries
and shortly thereafter was polling nationally
at 53%. That’s either a very large bump or a very inaccurate result
prior to the primary. There are currently a significantly high number
of undecided
voters (hovering between 17% and 21%) amongst the Republicans. In
a field this large where only Dr. Paul has a platform that represents
a real difference in policy, the "upset" factor leans
heavily in Ron Paul’s favor. Many of these undecideds are waiting
to see how the race progresses before making a commitment.
Let’s look
at the other areas which should give us rational, objective reasons
to question what the old media is attempting to sell the public.
Fundraising
is another indicator of real support. Ron Paul raised 5 million
last quarter which isn’t as much as Thompson, Romney or Giuliani.
But it represents a 114% increase over second quarter fundraising.
It will also be used far more efficiently than other campaigns which
have yet to acquire significant grass roots support for the money
they’ve raised and spent so far. This is a very important issue.
Romney has been running millions of dollars worth of television
ads and does not have much to show for it. And more
and more,
old media members continue
to hop on Ron Paul’s bandwagon.
The bad news
for Paul’s competitors doesn’t stop there. James Dobson who has
inherited the Christian Coalition (now "Values Voters")
is threatening to pull his support
from the entire GOP field. Ron Paul doesn’t necessarily need this
segment of the Republican base to win the nomination but if we read
Dobson’s message correctly, he would get that support if he were
the nominee. The "front-runners" have no chance of carrying
the Party without them and it doesn’t appear that any are pro-life
enough for Dobson.
Romney’s campaign
stops in New Hampshire are drawing no more than 100 supporters and
I’m being generous (many of those are old media representatives).
At one stop, he managed to commit the dumbest campaign move so far:
turn his back on a wheel-chair-bound Muscular Dystrophy sufferer,
who asked if Romney would have him arrested for using medical marijuana,
while the cameras rolled.
John McCain
was caught on tape at an event where a whopping one supporter(s)
showed up to see what he had to say.
Fred Thompson
hasn’t been on the trail very long, but has already been freeped
by Ron Paul supporters at a stop in Iowa and had to literally request
applause at a recent event attended by less than 50; perhaps they
came merely out of curiosity given their apparent lack of enthusiasm
for Thompson’s positions.
Unless Tancredo,
Brownback, Keyes, Hunter and Huckabee are saving up campaign event
videos, there seems to be no significant interest in their candidacies
except by the small number of people contacted via landline for
opinions.
In short, the
other candidates have been as exciting to potential voters as watching
paint dry.
None of the
GOP candidates have had much luck beating Ron Paul in straw
polls either. It’s hard to say how this might predict the outcome
of primary elections. However, 14 of 30 first place finishes with
10 of 30 resulting in top 3 finishes is indisputable evidence that
his chances are far more real than the old media is willing to admit.
Many of the first place finishes were overwhelming landslides. If
those represent party growth, we see another reason why Ron Paul
has a very good chance to make history.
Meanwhile,
Ron Paul has rarely drawn a crowd of less than 800 people for the
past three months. On Saturday in Nashville,
an event organized before his fundraising success had been announced,
Dr. Paul drew
a crowd of 1,440 at War Memorial auditorium.
That was the crowd inside. Almost 100 people were turned away at
the door because the venue was filled to capacity.
The prior week,
in New Hampshire, at least 800
arrived to help the Paul Family canvas New Hampshire neighborhoods.
These were not paid campaign staffers. Everyone there paid their
own way, came from several surrounding states and worked all day
to knock on some 12,000 doors in support of Ron Paul.
After last
night’s debates, Ron Paul held a rally in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
I caught a little bit of this from the live feed. In my estimation,
there were almost 2000 people there. The growth in just the past
few days has been staggering. The campaign has reported a daily
sign up of 20,000 new supporters. If that pace remains steady,
the number of new supporters will reach 600,000 before November
1st. (Hello? McFly! Does this seem like a long shot to you?)
From New Hampshire
to Washington,
thousands upon thousands have gathered at Ron Paul appearances.
If this were happening for any of the alleged front-runners, it
would generate an inordinate amount of press coverage. It isn’t
happening. The rest of the field consists of paper tigers. Giuliani
is said to "wow" crowds of 200.
New media types,
even ones who are not necessarily Ron Paul supporters are openly
saying that a Ron Paul upset in New Hampshire and Iowa
is a very real possibility. Here’s what David
Kopel had to say:
"This
weekend, I attended and spoke at the Second Amendment Foundation’s
annual Gun Rights Policy Conference, which was held at a convention
center in northern Kentucky, a few miles away from Cincinnati.
What I saw and heard there changed my mind about the viability
of Ron Paul’s presidential candidacy; Paul is going to far outperform
the expectations laid out for him."
As a supporter,
I could be accused of being overly optimistic merely because I want
him to win. I predicted he would win
back in June before there was evidence of the statistical sort.
Not because I am particularly smart, psychic or able to time-travel.
It was (and is) the fervor of his supporters and the amazing coalition
he has united to the message of freedom which made it obvious to
me that this campaign is historic.
Please, fence-sitters
out there: this revolution will roll with or without you. Do something
that you haven’t done in a while and just get involved. Show up
at an event, make a donation, believe. Oh, yeah, don’t expect me
to revert to cynicism any time soon.
October
12, 2007
Rick
Fisk [send him mail] is
a 45-year-old software developer and entrepreneur. He is married,
has 3 children and resides in Austin, TX.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Rick
Fisk Archives
|