YOUTUBE:
CNN / Lou Dobbs - Ron Paul Interview 2-26-2007
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EF37-9OGblw&mode=related&search=
RON PAUL: US GOING BROKE
Free Market News Network, FL - 7 hours ago
David Walker, Comptroller General at the Government
Accountability Office, appeared on the show “60 Minutes” last
evening to discuss the federal budget ..
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&q=Ron+Paul&btnG=Search+News
Congressman Ron Paul
Official web site for libertarian congressman Ron Paul (R - TX).
http://www.house.gov/paul/
Dr. Ron Paul
For more information about Ron Paul’s Presidential Exploratory
Committee, ... Receive Ron Paul's Freedom Report and find out
what Washington is really doing ...
http://www.ronpaul.org/
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Paul for President?
The maverick libertarian Republican talks on war, immigration,
and presidential ambition.
Brian Doherty | January 22, 2007
http://www.reason.com/news/show/118086.html
Excitement spread like wildfire last week across the libertarian
web: Ron Paul has entered the presidential race! Even the
mainstream press took notice. As we’ll see in the interview with
Rep. Paul (R-Texas) below, the excitement may have been
premature.
The reason for the excitement is understandable: Ron Paul has
been the most consistent successful politician advocating the
limited-government principles that he sees embedded in the
Constitution. Part of his appeal, to a voting base that we can
safely presume isn’t as libertarian as Paul is himself, is that
of the very rare politician following his own conscience and
mind with steadfast integrity. Indeed, Paul is not afraid of
aggravating even parts of his libertarian constituency when he
thinks it’s the right thing to do, as on immigration (where he’s
against amnesty and birthright citizenship, and for increased
border control) and his vote this month in favor of prescription
drug negotiation.
I first wrote at length about Paul in a 1999 American Spectator
profile. Its discussion of Paul's nature and appeal is worth
revisiting, even with some old details. Just remember, he’s
continued to win his reelection since 1999. In 2004, the
Democrats didn’t even bother running anyone against him. And in
2006 he won with 60 percent of the vote.
Though his name rarely appears in the national press, his face
almost never on Sunday morning news shows, in 1996 he was third
only to Gingrich and Bob Dornan in individual contributions to
Republican House members. Though he hasn’t managed to get any of
his own bills out of committee since re-entering the House in
January 1997, he’s considered a vital asset by a large national
constituency of libertarians, goldbugs, and constitutionalists.
He’s defied one of the holy shibboleths of electoral
politics—Thou Must Bring Home the Bacon—by being a consistent
opponent of agricultural subsidies in a largely agricultural
district…..
Ron Paul has been defying standard political rules since he
first won an off-term House election in 1976--a post-Watergate
year when new Republicans weren’t widely embraced. He lost the
regular election in ‘76, but came back to win in ‘78, ‘80, and
‘82, then left the House for an ill-fated go at the Senate seat
won by Phil Gramm.
....He ran for president on the Libertarian Party ticket in
1988. He was a hero to a national constituency of hard-core
skeptics about the State—the one successful politician who was
always steadfast even on the less-popular aspects of the
live-free-or-die libertarian philosophy. He’d talk about ending
the federal drug war when speaking to high school students. In
1985, he spent his own money to fly and testify on behalf of one
of the first draft-registration defiers to go to trial, not
blanching when confronted with the hot-blooded youngster’s use
of the phrase “Smash the State.” He might not use that verb, the
sober obstetrician, Air Force veteran, and family man said, but
from his first-hand experience with how the U.S. government
disrespects its citizens’ natural liberties, he could understand
the sentiments.
I talked to Paul Thursday afternoon by phone about presidential
and congressional politics. Here is an edited transcript of our
talk.
Reason: Does launching an official exploratory committee
necessarily mean you will end up launching an official campaign?
Ron Paul: Last week it leaked that we were getting ready to
organize an exploratory committee—I haven’t even officially
announced that yet. If I find with the exploratory committee
that there is some support out there, that we can raise the
money you need, then [I’d] declare that [I’m] running.
Reason: Now that it has leaked, what have you thought of the
response so far?
Paul: I think it’s been impressive. I’ve been pleased and
surprised.
Reason: Who are some of the staff and supporters behind the
committee?
Paul: I’m not going into any of that now--we haven’t even
officially made the announcement! It was leaked info and I’m
still in the process of organizing a team. [In an AP story, Kent
Snyder is identified as chairman for the exploratory committee.]
Reason: What would you anticipate the major issues you’d
emphasize in a presidential run, if it comes to that?
Paul: Everything I’ve talked about for 20 years! I think the
biggest thing for Republican primary voters is that most
Republicans are turned off right now. They’ve had a beating and
are reassessing their values. They have to decide what they
believe in. The Republican Party has become about big government
conservatism, and Republicans need to hear the message they used
to hear: that conservatives are supposed to be for small
government.
Reason: You appeared at a bipartisan press conference today on a
resolution regarding possible war in Iran….
Paul: Walter Jones (R-N.C.) has a resolution he’s introducing,
sponsored by both Democrats and Republicans, saying that the
president can’t go into Iran and spread this war without
permission of Congress. I don’t know the total number of
supporters, but we had a real nice bipartisan group, seven or
eight members of Congress, split between Republicans and
Democrats. I thought it went well. [The resolution has 12
co-sponsors.]
I think the feeling [on the Hill] is getting more against the
war every day. Republicans have generally benefited from being
on the other side of war issues, and lately we’ve been pressured
into supporting pre-emptive war, and it has hurt us politically.
The Old Right position was [antiwar] and through the 20th
century conservatives in the Republican Party have generally
been trying to keep us out of war, and we’ve generally benefited
by this. Eisenhower was elected to end the Korean War. Nixon was
supposed to end the Vietnam War and in 2000 Bush ran on a policy
of “no nation building” and not being the policeman of the
world. He criticized Clinton on Somalia. It’s a strong tradition
for Republicans to be on the side of avoiding military
conflicts. Democrats have generally been the international
instigators.
Reason: One of the Internet rumors is linking you with Rep. Tom
Tancredo (R-Col.) in a possible joint run…
Paul: Tancredo? No. We’ve never talked about anything like that.
Reason: And another rumor is that the GOP run could be a lead-in
to some sort of third party run…
Paul: A third party run? No.
Reason: Have you noticed any differences about being in the
minority party in Congress again? Will that affect you?
Paul: Well, the Republican Party leaders are acting in a very
defensive manner--which they’ve earned! It probably doesn’t
change what I do very much. I’m just as likely to get Democratic
support in things I want to do as from Republicans. Republicans
were too determined to support the president rather than
thinking things through and standing up to his requests to
expand government internationally or to expand entitlement
program at home. They’ve just gone along here.
Reason: Do you think the losing Congress will liberate more
Republicans to revolt against the administration?
Paul: That’s the other Republican politicians’ dilemma: They
don’t want to annoy some Republican voters, but at the same time
realize that it’s not very popular to have to defend the war.
When you see someone like Brownback [R-Kan.] scurrying away from
the war….there’s a big change in attitude [in the GOP] and
Republicans are starting to remember where they came from and
that they don’t have to be supporters of war. I think a year
from now there will be a lot more Republican antiwar people
around.
Reason: Do you expect the Democrats to do anything substantive
to stop the war?
Paul: I think we’ll see more rhetoric than a real desire to do
[something specific]. We’ll see hiding behind just saying that
“we don’t like this, Bush made a mess, but we can’t cut the
money because then we won’t be supporting the troops.” I think
that’s a cop out. There’s plenty of money to take care of the
troops, billions of dollars in piles.
Reason: What did you think of Sen. Joe Biden’s declaration that
there’s really nothing Congress can do to stop the war?
Paul: I think Biden is absolutely wrong. The Constitution gives
more responsibility to Congress in dealing with foreign policy
than to the executive. The only thing the president can do is be
commander in chief after being given directions to pursue. If we
had followed the rules he wouldn’t have been able to do a thing,
with no declaration of war. How can the commander in chief fight
a war that hasn’t been declared? If Congress had not been so
complacent in its responsibilities….The war in Vietnam finally
ended by definancing, but tragically after 60,000 Americans
died. Congress has lots of responsibility, for defining policy,
raising an army, buying equipment, the whole works. For Biden to
say that–that’s avoiding the responsibility of doing what we can
do.
Reason: Have you had much interaction with the larger active
antiwar movement from the left?
Paul: Not really. I have a lot of people who correspond with me
who come from the left, but I don’t go to their events since
there’s so often more on their plate than just the war. They
have an agenda I don’t endorse. I’m interested in reviving that
spirit that says conservatives and limited-government
constitutionalists can support the antiwar position, can be
comfortable without aggressive foreign policy.
Reason: What do you have to say to libertarians who disagree
with your immigration position, such as on amnesty, birthright
citizenship, and a concentration of federal money on border
security?
Paul: If they don’t agree, they’d have to be anarchists, and I’m
not. I believe in national borders and national security. My
position is, take away incentives--why are states compelled to
give free education and medical care? I don’t endorse easy
automatic citizenship for people who break the law. They
shouldn’t be able to come reap the benefits of welfare state. I
don’t think libertarians can endorse that. I think removing the
incentives is very important, but I don’t think you can solve
the immigration problem until you deal with the welfare state
and the need for labor created by a government that interferes
with the market economy. We’re short of labor at the same time
lots of people are paid not to work. Take away [illegal
immigrants'] incentives. I do believe in a responsibility to
protect our borders, rather than worrying about the border
between North and South Korea or Iraq and Syria, and I think
that’s a reasonable position.
Reason: Some of your libertarian fans were also upset about your
vote on government price negotiations for Medicare drugs….
Paul: The government is already involved in giving out
prescription drugs, in a program that the drug companies love
and spend hundreds of millions lobbying for, this
interventionist program. The drug corporations love it. Should
government say something about controlling prices since it's a
government program? I want to cut down spending, so why not say
that government has a responsibility to get a better bargain?
Both choices were horrible, but the person who complained on the
Internet did not understand the vote. I don’t vote for price
controls, obviously, but if government has to buy something—even
if they shouldn’t be buying it!--they have a responsibility to
get the best price. But most importantly, we shouldn’t be in
that business [of buying drugs].
Reason: When can we expect an official announcement about your
presidential plans?
Paul: It’s going to be several weeks. We want to get our ducks
lined up, be better prepared to line up committees and all the
things we didn’t get together before the information about [the
exploratory committee] was leaked. I was impressed with how
quick it leaked, and the reaction, O man!
Reason: Any reaction from your congressional colleagues or
Republican Party types?
Paul: Not a whole lot. I didn’t expect them to say too much. I
mean, they mention it—it’s not like they refuse to talk about
it—but it’s not the hottest subject around. It’s much hotter on
the Internet.
It will have to be a grassroots campaign and rely on the
internet. If we don’t learn how to use that to its maximum
benefit, we won’t have a very viable campaign. We’ll be able to
raise significant amounts, but obviously we’re not getting money
from corporate giants and we’re not apt to raise $100 million.
Money is pretty important, but it’s not the final issue. There
are other ways of running, more so today than ever before, new
ways of reaching people in an economical manner. Obvious you
have to get a certain [minimum amount] of money, but right now I
have no idea of the number.