Please
Keep Running, Ron
by
Eric Garris and Anthony
Gregory
by Eric Garris and Anthony Gregory
DIGG THIS
The Ron Paul
Revolution has been the greatest distinctly libertarian phenomenon
in modern American history. Ron Paul has already achieved an unsurpassed
victory in electoral politics – spreading the message of individual
liberty, free markets, the rule of law, sound money and peace. Now
that it is certain that the Republican Party will pass up the opportunity
of a lifetime and nominate another champion of the welfare/warfare
state instead of the one candidate who actually stands for fiscal
responsibility and limited government, it is time to consider how
Ron’s campaign can reach its full potential in cultivating a freedom
movement whose legacy will last far into the future.
Ron Paul should
run as a third-party candidate. He has already done an immeasurable
amount of good and he could retire now, with us owing him an enormous
debt for his tireless efforts and sacrifice. But we ask Ron to continue
his run. For the sake of his supporters, the movement, and American
liberty, this country needs a credible alternative on the November
ballot to the bipartisan policies of ever-expanding government and
perpetual war.
Ron Paul should
seek the Libertarian nomination for president. It is his logical
home. He is a member of the Libertarian Party, he ran in 1988, and
an overwhelming majority of party members want a chance to support
him again. Should he run as an independent, he would not have the
ballot access that the LP offers. He would also have less of a chance
of leaving behind a cohesive mass movement for liberty.
The Libertarian
Party has never had an opportunity like this. Ron
Paul has polled 8% in a hypothetical general election against
a Republican, Democrat and other candidate (Nader), and he gets
most of those votes from non-Republicans. This poll result is gigantic,
surpassing past LP results many times over. Such a turnout would
benefit the movement for many years to come. Some seasoned electoral
libertarians might be reluctant, thinking it cannot turn out so
well, given past experience, but they must understand that this
is an entirely anomalous opportunity. Nothing in the past compares.
Perhaps this would explain why a plurality of LP voters have made
write-in
votes in California and declared themselves "uncommitted"
in Missouri, instead of picking from the long list of LP candidates:
A good number of them might very well be holding out for Ron.
This would
not mean he would have to abandon his congressional seat. Texas
has a sore loser law, meaning he would not be able to appear on
the state ballot as a Libertarian running for president. But in
Texas the party could nominate his wife, Carol Paul, and everybody
would know what it meant.
Some might
object on the grounds that Paul is not like most Libertarians on
certain social issues. And yet this incongruity is not nearly as
significant as it may seem. Paul’s federal plank on abortion, for
example – the relegation of the issue back to the states – is identical
to that of the last three Libertarian presidential campaigns. His
position on immigration is nuanced, shared by a huge portion of
LP members, and focused more on slashing welfare than building a
Tancredo-style police state.
Indeed, in
practical terms, running
as a "true conservative" has not worked, regardless of
how much stress was put on his pro-life and pro-borders positions.
In fact, Paul has polled much better among pro-choicers
– who are two to three times as likely to support him as pro-lifers
– and other moderates. Conservatives, Christians and other traditional
constituencies on the right are far,
far more likely to back the typical candidates; it is the
self-described liberals, the antiwar constituency, the
moderates and other non-red-state Fascists who have been enthusiastic
about the Paul campaign.
While Ron Paul
should certainly not abandon cultural conservatives, or
any of his natural constituencies, his campaign’s rightward
strategy has failed. The Republican establishment and most GOP voters
hardly gave Paul a chance. Most folks who really want less government
probably left the party long ago. Every exit poll and detailed pre-polls
showed Republicans were the least likely to vote for Ron Paul. States
with open primaries showed him getting three to five times as many
votes from Democrats and independents as from Republicans.
And why should
they like him? He is not, in fact, a classic Republican at all.
Yes, there was the great Robert Taft, but he was an historical aberration.
From the very beginning and without much interruption, the
GOP has always been a party of big government, the police state,
and war.
War alone explains
why so many conservatives who agree with Ron Paul on everything
from taxes and gun rights to immigration and abortion have been
willing to pull the lever for candidates who promise more big government,
more central administration from Washington DC and piles of social
spending. For them and Ron Paul alike, war is the single most important
issue. It just so happens that they’re wrong on it, and he’s right.
It is telling
that while these conservatives who ostensibly agree with Paul on
most things except the war oppose him, many Americans who disagree
with him on abortion, immigration, and other domestic policy questions
energetically support him. It is the sign of a political realignment
– bigger government and much smaller government finally being pitted
against each other, with the paramount issue of foreign policy at
last getting the central importance it deserves.
Paul has already
been doing exactly what a
Libertarian candidate should be doing. He has been bringing
the philosophy of liberty to the masses through the electoral process.
Running as a Libertarian, Ron Paul can continue to push the issues
that affect mainstream Americans, the poor and middle class – a
consistent libertarian program of peace, much smaller government
and dramatically lower taxes, civil liberties, a restored Bill of
Rights and an end to destructive central bank inflation.
Whenever Paul
himself has spoken on camera, he has been able to explain principled
libertarian positions, some of them esoteric and confounding, on
monetary policy, foreign affairs and economics, in a sincere way
that makes these positions palatable to average Americans. He has
done unusually well at making the free market sound good to liberals
and peace sound good to conservatives. It has been his campaign
that has watered down this message, attempting to chase down Republican
votes that weren’t for the taking. As a Libertarian, he could keep
focusing on his principled message on war, peace and the economy
– while also continuing to condemn spending, gun control, secret
prisons, warrantless surveillance, attacks on habeas corpus, torture
and the drug war with even more force than Republican politics often
allows. His focus on regressive inflation even gives him more chance
to reach out to the left on economics than other campaigns have
offered.
It has always
been his libertarian radicalism, delivered calmly in the spirit
of traditional Americanism and down-to-earth bourgeois values, that
has animated his many thousands of supporters, inspiring online
artists, musicians, writers, activists and people from all walks
of life to unite behind his message. It has been his libertarian
fire, and not his supposed Republican bona fides, that has awoken
the
youth – the most crucial component to any lasting movement.
Now that the Republican Party has reminded us, once again, this
time decisively, that it is not a party for liberty or small government
– and especially not a party of peace – it is time for Ron Paul
to leave that bloodthirsty, corporatist coalition and lead our movement
to future victories.
We’ve all loved
seeing him in the debates. Imagine him in the national spotlight
in the general election. Picture him against McCain and Hillary,
the one man standing for freedom and peace with two other choices
clearly on the same side – the side of bureaucracy, entitlements,
the prison-industrial complex and aggressive militarism.
As the primaries
end, it is up to Ron Paul to ensure that it is only the beginning
for his Revolution. Let us hope he decides to keep up the fight.
February
7, 2008
Eric
Garris [send him mail]
is webmaster for LewRockwell.com and Antiwar.com. He has been a
political activist for over 40 years. Anthony Gregory [send
him mail] is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California.
He is a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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Gregory Archives
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