I can’t
forgive myself for voting for Arnold Schwarzenegger for governor
during the
2003 recall. I selected a “winnable” loser rather
than Tom McClintock,
a principled conservative who knew what policies to pursue to right
California’s sinking fiscal ship. If everyone who voted for
Schwarzenegger under the belief that McClintock couldn’t win
had voted for McClintock, who’s now a congressman, perhaps
he would have won the governorship.
The Schwarzenegger
vs. McClintock race springs to mind as Ron Paul, the quirky Texas
congressman with unwavering libertarian principles, pursues the
GOP nomination for the presidency. Paul is not a dynamic personality,
but he has a firm grasp of the issues. Currently, he is near the
top of polls for the Iowa caucuses, and his national support has
remained strong.
We know that
none of the other Republicans will seriously slash the size of government,
even if they have Republican majorities in Congress. None of them
will bring the troops home, regardless of how costly those wars
have become or how contrary they are to the traditional Republican
belief of nonintervention in foreign affairs.
Despite encouraging
rhetoric from some candidates (i.e., Rick Perry’s description
of Social Security as a Ponzi scheme), the “serious” candidates
will not try to swap U.S. entitlements with private alternatives.
None of them
will address the Federal Reserve, which, according to Paul, makes
it easy for the feds to print the money needed to finance their
free-spending ways. At best, a winning mainstream Republican will
tinker around the edges of reform, perhaps limiting government just
enough to let the economy heat up again.
Even if Paul
pulls off the upset of the century, he may not have the skills or
congressional support to succeed. He can be obtuse, such as the
time when he was asked about his favorite Ronald Reagan legacy and
gave a boring answer about the money supply. But despite his many
flaws, he at least he understands that the nation’s problems
center on its gargantuan government.
Too bad everyone
knows he can’t win.
Media Blackout
Comedian Jon
Stewart once featured a devastating segment (YouTube below) on the
media coverage of the primary race. Paul had high poll numbers but
the talking heads wouldn’t mention his name. They talked about
the hapless Jon Huntsman, who was barely registering on the polls,
but didn’t mention Paul. After one blogger took him to task
for writing about the presidential candidates without mentioning
Paul, Jonah Goldberg, editor of National Review Online, responded:
“The reason I didn’t mention him is precisely the reason
[he] suspects: I don’t take Ron Paul seriously as a presidential
contender because (in my opinion) he isn’t one. He is the Right’s
version of Ralph Nader.”
Conservative
writer Warner Todd Huston wrote recently that Paul is not a serious
candidate because he has not built a serious statewide organization,
which might be a legitimate argument except that Huston hurled unfounded
accusations at Paul, charging his minions with anti-Semitism and
surrender in the face of “Islamofascism.” His diatribe
against the mild-mannered physician/candidate touches on why most
conservatives won’t take him seriously – Paul’s foreign-policy
views.
Foreign
Policy
To the hawks
who dominate the modern GOP (and the Democratic Party, too, lest
you wonder why the president’s foreign policy differs little
from his predecessor’s), Paul’s focus on reducing military
commitments and concentrating on defense rather than on nation-building
is the equivalent of appeasement in the face of Nazism, which is
the analogy Huston used.
You’d
think it a waste of time to hammer a candidate with no chance of
winning. But those conservatives committed to military expansion
abroad and who have little concern about the “war on terror’s”
effect on civil liberties at home don’t want to take chances.
The lefties dislike him too, as Bob Schieffer’s rude interview
on “Face the Nation” last weekend showed.
Nevertheless,
Paul might just win Iowa. I was active in the caucuses there years
ago. It’s a socially conservative state. But the libertarian
Paul is making inroads. In these dire economic times, more voters
are noticing that government growth, debt spending and the economy
are paramount.
Paul might
not have a good campaign ground game going, but Herman Cain doesn’t
have much of a ground game, either. That didn’t stop Cain from
getting weeks of serious national media coverage. His campaign was
derailed by sexual harassment allegations, and by his painfully
embarrassing answer to an newspaper editorial board’s puffball
question about President Obama’s Libya policy. Cain knew nothing
about the topic as he aimlessly searched his empty mental Rolodex
for answers. Cain’s collapse came after Perry’s infamous
“oops” moment during a GOP debate when he was asked which
three federal departments he would eliminate, but he couldn’t
think of a third one.
Anyone But
Mitt
Former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich is the flavor of the month, as GOP primary
voters search for anyone but Mitt Romney, whose slick personality
and fairly liberal policies turn off grass-roots activists.
But Gingrich
has malleable principles himself, and he is dogged by personal scandals.
It’s hard
to be impressed by any of the other Republican candidates, who range
from the hopelessly establishmentarian (Rick Santorum and Huntsman)
to the fringy (Michele Bachmann, who has been dubbed the winner
of the “Who’s Crazier Than Sarah Palin” contest by
comedian Conan O’Brien, because of some of her rhetoric).
When you look
at the Republican lineup or at the out-of-his-depth former community
activist who went from state senator to Oval Office in four years,
it’s hard to make the case that Paul is somehow not serious.
In reality, Paul “can’t win” because the political
establishment knows how serious he is about his limited-government
views.
Even in the
most optimistic scenario, Paul is a long shot. But the country’s
problems are so deep that perhaps it’s time to take a chance
on someone with the right answers, regardless of the odds. Unless,
of course, you’re still celebrating the way that Gov. Schwarzenegger
saved California from disaster.
Jon Stewart
segment on Ron Paul:
Ron Paul interviewed
by Bob Schieffer:
November
29, 2011
Steven
Greenhut (send him mail)
is editor-in-chief of CalWatchdog.com,
author of Plunder!
How Public Employee Unions Are Raiding Treasuries, Controlling Our
Lives And Bankrupting The Nation!, and a columnist for The
Orange County Register.
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