NYT Front Page: After Paul Falters, Backers Push Agenda in Party and Other Races

Joined
Apr 10, 2012
Messages
71
Mods, if I am now allowed to include the text, you can remove it for me, but hopefully with the citation it is not a problem.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/23/u...ers-push-agenda-in-party-and-other-races.html

WASHINGTON — Armed with an inherited fortune and a devotion to Ron Paul, John Ramsey, a 21-year-old college student from Nacogdoches, Tex., plunged into a little-watched Republican House primary in Northern Kentucky this spring to promote his version of freedom.

Right: James Crisp/Associated Press and Genevieve Ross, via Associated Press
Supporters of Representative Ron Paul are backing the candidacies of Thomas H. Massie, left, for a House seat in Kentucky and Kurt P. Bills, right, for the Senate in Minnesota.

The Election 2012 App
A one-stop destination for the latest political news — from The Times and other top sources. Plus opinion, polls, campaign data and video.
Download for iPhone
Download for Android
More than $560,000 later, Mr. Ramsey’s chosen standard-bearer, Thomas H. Massie, a Republican, cruised to victory Tuesday in the race to select a successor to Representative Geoff Davis, a Republican who is retiring.

The saturation advertising campaign waged by Mr. Ramsey’s “super PAC,” Liberty for All, may be the most visible manifestation of a phenomenon catching the attention of Republicans from Maine to Nevada.

With their favorite having lost the nomination for president, Mr. Paul’s dedicated band of youthful supporters are setting their sights down-ballot and swarming lightly guarded Republican redoubts like state party conventions in an attempt to infiltrate the top echelons of the party.

“Karl Rove’s fear-and-smear-style Republicans are going to wake up at the end of the year and realize we are now in control of the Republican Party,” said Preston Bates, a Democrat-turned-Paulite who is running Liberty for All for Mr. Ramsey.

In Minnesota, Paulites stormed the Republican gathering in St. Cloud last weekend, bumping aside two conventional Republican candidates to choose one of their own, Kurt P. Bills, a high school economics teacher, to challenge Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat, this fall.

Backers of Mr. Paul, a Republican congressman from Texas, crashed Republican conventions in Iowa, Maine, Minnesota and Nevada in recent weeks, snatching up the lion’s share of delegate slots for the Republican National Convention in Tampa this August, a potential headache for the national party and its presumptive nominee, Mitt Romney.

And Paulite candidates for Congress are sprouting up from Florida to Virginia to Colorado, challenging sitting Republicans and preaching the gospel of radically smaller government, an end to the Federal Reserve, restraints on Bush-era antiterrorism laws and a pullback from foreign military adventures.

“I’d call it a strict constitutional approach,” said Senator Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky and Ron Paul’s son. “And I think it’s spreading.”

Republican Party officials say they are in daily contact with Representative Paul, in a delicate effort to harness the energy around him without inciting his supporters. “We have had open dialogue with Dr. Paul and his campaign to ensure we are all focused on winning in November,” said Sean Spicer, the Republican National Committee’s communications director.

Mr. Ramsey said that other Paul supporters had brought the Kentucky race to his attention and that he would spend whatever it takes “to get this country moving in a freer direction.” “How much money would you spend for freedom?” he asked Tuesday, after buying airtime from Lexington to Louisville with money he inherited from his grandfather in 2010 as he was being pulled into the libertarian orbit of Mr. Paul.

He met Mr. Bates on the Paul campaign, and in March they incorporated Liberty for All with nearly $1 million of Mr. Ramsey’s money. More than half of it went into Kentucky’s Fourth District in a whoosh of advertising. The impact has been significant.

Mr. Massie, the Lewis County judge executive and an engineer trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he opened the seven-way Republican primary with a lead. But he lost it after Mr. Davis and former Senator Jim Bunning backed one of his rivals, Alecia Webb-Edgington. Then small advertising buys from two other candidates pummeled him with negative accusations.

The sprawling Fourth District of Kentucky presents competitors with a challenge. To reach all its voters, a candidate must advertise in four media markets in Kentucky and Ohio. Mr. Massie acknowledged that he could not do that, but that Liberty for All could. Soon, the advertising for his rivals was drowned out by attacks on his behalf.

“They owned the airwaves, everything from the Food Channel to Court TV,” he said of the PAC.

The Ramsey money does not have a clear path from Kentucky, but Liberty for All appears to have a taste for the obscure. Its next candidate is Michael D. Cargill, a gay, black gun store owner running for constable in Travis County, Tex.

But the political action committee will have money to spend. Mr. Ramsey said that between his wallet and a fund-raising push, the PAC expected to have $10 million this summer.

As they were nominating Mr. Bills at the Minnesota Republican Convention, the Paul forces also seized 12 of the state’s 13 Republican National Convention delegate slots. In Maine, they took 21 of the 24 slots. In Nevada, they grabbed 22 of the 28.

The strategy of crashing state conventions has secured Mr. Paul large slates of delegates in Alaska, Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana and Missouri, as well.

Such delegates are not considered a threat to the Romney nomination. But they could be vocal advocates for Mr. Paul’s libertarian views on issues like the war in Afghanistan, the Patriot Act and terrorist detainee policies, which overlap some with Tea Party views but do not mirror them.

And lightly regarded Paulites running for Congress could become forces with the right amount of money. Tisha Casida, an independent in Colorado, is running against Representative Scott Tipton. Calen Fretts is chipping away at Representative Jeff Miller in Florida’s Panhandle, and Karen Kwiatkowski is challenging Representative Robert W. Goodlatte in Virginia.

“I think there’s a great movement going on in this country,” said Ms. Casida, who said she was pulled into politics by Mr. Paul’s message and the red tape she faced trying to open a local farmer’s market.
 
"Republican Party officials say they are in daily contact with Representative Paul, in a delicate effort to harness the energy around him without inciting his supporters." Wouldn't want to incite those Ron Paul supporters. Would we now? :D

"No matter what they did to us. No matter how much they ridculed or marginalized us, as was done during the campaign, it only energised the grassroots" ~Ron Paul 2008~ And it is now 2012. Take that, bitches.
 
Last edited:
Ok, so we "crashed" the conventions... he promoted "his version" of freedom... our favorite has "lost" the nomination... we are "swarming" to "infiltrate"... we "stormed" a gathering... we "seized" and "grabbed" delegate slots...

While, we may perceive this to be a favorable article, the underlying tone is clear. We are an outside force trying to sneak our way in to steal the party. And the idiot voters are too dumb to know it because we have people spending their inheritance money to trick them into voting for this radical ideology.

Get this straight - we are taking this party back from the infiltrators that have taken over. It is not "conservative" to go around the world nation-building. It is not "conservative" to have the government impose a morality on the people - even if we may hold conservative morals ourselves. It is not "conservative" leave our children our debt because we can't control our spending.
 
Just to be clear, I didn't post this article because I liked it or hated it but just because it was front page news in a huge paper and thought it warranted a thread.
 
Just to be clear, I didn't post this article because I liked it or hated it but just because it was front page news in a huge paper and thought it warranted a thread.

Pfft! you beat me to it. Thats twice now I've seen Paul on the front page of the New York Times.
 
Apparently elected delegates attending their convention is considered crashing it. I learn so much from the NYT.
 
"No matter what they did to us. No matter how much they ridculed or marginalized us, as was done during the campaign, it only energised the grassroots" ~Ron Paul 2008~

And it is now 2012. Take that, bitches.

Bwahahahahahah +1
 
"Its next candidate is Michael D. Cargill, a gay, black gun store owner running for constable in Travis County, Tex."

there's a new sheriff in town, folks!

that's awesome.
 
Apparently elected delegates attending their convention is considered crashing it. I learn so much from the NYT.

hmmm.

what did the neocons call it, when THEY infiltrated the GOP, wrestling control away from the paleos and libertarian base? i forget. anyone?
 
33eitxx.jpg
 
the comments section of the article, sheesh...what i hoped would be intelligent, insightful commentary is basically reduced to ' the gold standard would bring this country to ruin' and ' ...go move to somalia!' not much love for RP in the Times i guess.
 
Ok, so we "crashed" the conventions... he promoted "his version" of freedom... our favorite has "lost" the nomination... we are "swarming" to "infiltrate"... we "stormed" a gathering... we "seized" and "grabbed" delegate slots...

I noticed all of these things on my first read-through. Mealy-mouthed bastards! It's no wonder "journalists" are coming to be regarded with as much contempt as politicians.

While, we may perceive this to be a favorable article, the underlying tone is clear. We are an outside force trying to sneak our way in to steal the party. And the idiot voters are too dumb to know it because we have people spending their inheritance money to trick them into voting for this radical ideology.

Get this straight - we are taking this party back from the infiltrators that have taken over. It is not "conservative" to go around the world nation-building. It is not "conservative" to have the government impose a morality on the people - even if we may hold conservative morals ourselves. It is not "conservative" leave our children our debt because we can't control our spending.
+rep!
 
Last edited:
hahaha "harness our energy??!?!!!?" without a message of freedom harnessing our energy will be like trying to herd cats! :P
 
Last edited:
Back
Top