I think people who don't understand the process when it comes to money and earmarks will say that it was a bad answer or didn't "hit a home run."
Did you notice RP's remark about "how many of those earmarks ever passed?" referring to all the earmarks he's passed through to the relevant committees in Congress for various constituent groups in his district?
I know very few of those he has submitted have ever passed. Maybe none. AFAIK, none of the 65 he passed on from his constituents passed this last year because if you don't play the pork game in Congress, your earmarks get ignored. RP's opponent, Peden, in the GOP primary in TX is campaigning on how they need to get more of their pork though it sure doesn't seem like they've suffered much, considering how much money is spent in that district now.
He has a good record on voting against earmarks when Jeff Flake brought up the 19 votes on the Bridge To Nowhere ($250M) and the Iowa rainforest which even a lot of Iowans think is stupid pork. In last year's, RP went 19 for 19 against porky earmarks in the 2006 votes.
This year, Flake came back with a larger list. However, these didn't have anything as egregious as a $250M Bridge To Nowhere. Flake and the other candidates elected with PAC money from Club For Growth PAC all made sure they voted against. Ron Paul compiled a good, but not perfect score on these anti-earmark votes. He recognized it was a little dog-and-pony show to help re-elect Club For Growth members and raise money for their PAC. The only earmark he voted in favor of in the state of Texas was one for a Houston zoo for $100,000 as I recall and it came out of Dept. of Interior funds. Other than the Club For Growth toadies, Ron Paul did better than virtually the entire Republican House caucus in these 2007 anti-earmark votes according to the Club's scorecard. Naturally, he still retains a very high record with the Taxpayers Union people but Tancredo slightly edged him out this year, probably because Tanc wanted to have a very pure record for his own presidential run. Ron Paul votes the same way, year in, year out, whether he's running for president or not. So that's a plus too.
Ron Paul doesn't chair a committee so he doesn't play the earmarks and pork game like the others do. Say, like Duncan Hunter who took home a $19M weapon system program this year that the Pentagon did not request (but did not publicly oppose). It was some sort of personal armor for troops or something like that. Hunter didn't get the $35M or more that others like Pelosi got but he still did pretty well for the minority leader of the Armed Forces Committee, one of the biggest porkmonsters committees in Congress. I assume Duncan traded his pork for the even larger pork that the majority chairman, Murtha, took home. And Murtha is about the most corrupt pol in Congress, going all the way back to getting caught by the FBI on tape trying to take bribes in the ABSCAM scandal.
Given how much FUD gets spread about earmarks, a lot of voters
think they understand earmarks but actually don't so we all need to bone up on this basic civic education stuff to counter the attacks on Ron Paul.
I wish the campaign would research this and tell us how many of the 65 submitted earmarks passed this year (none, I think). And how many have been passed in all the years that Ron Paul has been in Congress. Well, at least since he returned to Congress in 1998.