By

Ed Kilgore /

The New Republic/ December 20, 2011, 8:34 AM

Get ready for Ron Paul's 15 minutes

GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul is in a virtual tie for second place in Iowa. The economic crisis seems to be opening voters' minds to his libertarian ideas.

GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul is in a virtual tie for second place in Iowa. The economic crisis seems to be opening voters' minds to his libertarian ideas.

In an invisible primary where it seems everyone other than Jon Huntsman and Rick Santorum is fated to have his or her brief day in the sun, two new polls from Iowa show the indefatigable Ron Paul now leading the field among likely caucus-goers, with just two weeks left before actual voting occurs.

The media, much to the consternation of fanatical Paulists, is already writing him off as another flash-in-the pan, his libertarianism too extreme to gain the support of moderate conservatives and too at odds with social conservatives to win over their vital support. This is the right instinct—Paul will not win the nomination—but then how to explain his growing popularity? The truth is that, with the singular exception of his Chomskyesque views on foreign policy, Paul is not nearly as divorced from mainstream conservative thought as was the case four years ago.

Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul challenge electability questions

As it has been for past candidates with a small but intense and highly organized following (most famously Pat Robertson in 1988), Iowa is indeed a promising environment for a Paul upset.  That’s partly because it is a caucus state where the number of supporters it takes to win is limited, and partly because Paul has made important inroads with key groups like home-schoolers and college students. Moreover, the steadiness of Paul’s support has given him staying power even as other campaigns have undergone feast-and-famine swings. What’s perhaps most remarkable about the new Public Policy Polling survey that gave Paul his first Iowa lead is how similar the numbers look compared to results published back in April, which showed Romney in the twenties and Gingrich, Paul and Bachmann in the teens. Paul’s poll “surge” is actually a matter of adding seven points over the last eight months.

The reason Paul has been able to slowly build his base of support in the state is that, on most issues, his views no longer lie outside the mainstream of the party orthodoxy. It’s become one of the great clichés of 2012 that the GOP as a whole has moved significantly in Ron Paul’s direction since his last campaign in 2008, and on domestic issues, it’s largely true. Paul’s endless fulminations about profligate monetary policy and the evil Fed, as well as his draconian prescriptions for a radically smaller federal government, now all sound completely within the conservative mainstream.

This development is due, in part, to the fact that there is now a Democratic administration that all Republicans are happy to demonize. More subtly, Paul’s narrative of a long disastrous national slide into socialism, which sounded very weird to many Republicans when their party controlled the White House and Congress, has become commonplace, as have hints and (for some) outright arguments that the entire New Deal and Great Society legacies need to be dismantled.  

A Democratic administration has also made it possible for Republicans to disparage, with some degree of impunity, current military engagements in Afghanistan and Libya, while concerns over the economy have generally placed foreign policy issues on the back burner. But in a conservative-movement-dominated GOP, ideological purity is more important than ever, and by any standard Ron Paul flunks every foreign policy and national defense litmus test imaginable. Paul’s views on the projection of American power abroad are sure to get a thorough airing if he does win in Iowa, sending him right back to the fringe status he occupied in 2008. 

While there remain different “schools” of foreign policy thinking on the right, the two words that best define conservative orthodoxy at the moment are “American exceptionalism,” the belief that the United States is uniquely endowed (some would say directly by God) with the resources and moral authority to defend the world against totalitarian evil, generally, and what most perceive as an Islamist threat, in particular. A corollary to “American exceptionalism” might be termed “Israeli exceptionalism,” the belief (buttressed by conservative evangelicals with various theological axes to grind) that Israel is America’s best and most important ally, with its own unique role to play in the struggle against Islamists, tyrants, and Islamist tyrants.

Paul emphatically repudiates both forms of exceptionalism, as illustrated most notably by his consistent view that America’s problems with the Islamic world are mainly a product of “blowback” from past U.S. meddling in the region. At a time when other candidates are arguing about exactly how much military power will be needed to prevent an intolerable achievement of nuclear weapons capability by Iran, Paul has actually defended Iran’s right to become a nuclear power and points to the CIA’s role in overthrowing Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953 as creating a permanent and justified Iranian grievance against the U.S. As Michele Bachmann charged during the most recent candidate debate (in words we will hear over and over if Paul does well in Iowa), Paul’s foreign policy views place him well “to the left of Obama.” And at a time when conservatives are avid to attack Obama as an enemy of Israel, Paul’s hostility to the U.S.-Israeli military alliance is so notorious that the Republican Jewish Coalition has twice banned him from candidate forums, labeling him a “virulent and harsh critic of Israel.”

To be sure, today’s wild and wooly GOP is a much friendlier venue for the Ron Paul Revolution than it’s ever been, and a low turnout caucus in Iowa may showcase its strengths. But Paul’s residual weaknesses, rooted in a refusal to match domestic with global belligerence, will be enough to give him a one-way ticket back to political oblivion.

Ed Kilgore is a special correspondent for The New Republic. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

The New Republic. All rights reserved.
155 Comments Add a Comment
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historylands says:
The relevance of CBS News and Mr. Kilgore's tantrum against Dr. Paul's imminent victory in Iowa prove that their 15 minutes was up a long time ago. All that's left for this ignorant duo is to now generate excuses for the lies that they have been spinning onto the American public. Mr. Kilgore publicly insults Iowans. He looks up a few $10 words in his thesaurus, hoping that Americans won't challenge their meaning. He will next turn his rabidness against the people of New Hampshire where he and CBS will again back the losing side.
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TimeIsNowfor99 replies:
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Sorry to say but Paul has too many skeletons in his closet to be a serious contender for President of our Nation much less than a small south beach condo where he belongs. Bigots need not apply for the POS.
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RonTakeOne says:
@Ed Kilgore
1. You mean "Get ready for Ron Paul's 8 years"
2. I don't think "draconian" means what you think in means.
3. Paul's foreign policy is to the right of Obama and the other GOP candidates if you consider the party's historic platform. In case you didn't know, Historic = Right, Modern = Left. Think about it.
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bruceben9 says:
the politicians may be literally betting their lives against ron paul. it is not inconcievable that we could see a french revolution type situation in the US. people are sick of the aristocracy/peasant society we seem to be headed towards.
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TimeIsNowfor99 replies:
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Well, we better not vote for Ron Paul. He has stated his goal would be to elimnate Capital Gains Tax altogether. No single action could be more or a deathblow to the middle class oa America than that. The inequality gap would increase at such a pace it scares the hell out of me. Look what happened when Busg dropped capital gains from 20% to 15%. The inequality gap trned skyrocketed in favor of the ultra rich. Ron Paul is a dangerous man. Very dangerous if you are not in the top 0.1% economically.
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AlternativePresent says:
extreme today is life tomarrow
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CaardVaark says:
The pen is mightier then the sword and a dollar buys lots of pens. Donate to Ron Paul so we can clean up this garbage spill called American Politics/Media Watch , in a few weeks when Ron Paul's support is solidified , half of the GOP elite will swear they never said an unkind thing about him. Open up your wallets people, even if it's only 5 bucks. Now is the time! Go Ron Paul.
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CaardVaark says:
Since when did the words enthusiastic supporters, strong base, youthful voters, and grass roots funding, become anathema to the GOP? Exactly why does the GOP elite disrespect Dr. Ron Paul as a nominee? Is it because they fear he can't be bought? If the Republicans would rally around Paul he couldn't be stopped. This country still wants the hope and change that Obama promised but never delivered. He is the GOP candidate with the best chance of taking the election all the way. In fact, with the mood this country is currently in, I think he is the only one that can take the GOP all the way to the White House.
I am Democrats for Ron Paul and I approve this message.
Tweet this post if you are too.
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retiredgustav replies:
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Ron Paul is the republican George McGovern. A good honest man whose views are just too extreme for mainstream America.
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noloyalisti says:
Out only real answer is to start a second political party to wrest the country back from the Wall Street and Bankster Corporations. Anything else is just window dressing. The corrupt Congress and president had their chance. Now it's time to general strike and move on.
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Truthspeaker1 says:
You want Ron Paul's support to go to somebody else? Have one of these other jokers acknowledge that the War on Marijuana is not just FAILING, but WRONG.

I will not vote for a prohibitionist. Ever. Screw your party lines... the GOP may just want ANYBODY who isn't Obama, but to me Obama, Gingrich and Romney are three faces of the same dude. Santorum & Bachmann are even worse.

I'll be voting for Ron Paul unless somebody else starts making some sense. If you get Romney/Gingrich vs Obama... nobody will even bring up the drug war.

The GOP simply doesn't WANT our votes. Obama has broken the hearts of marijuana advocates more he has with anyone else and yet still the GOP does not want our votes. Good job.
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noloyalisti replies:
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There is no such thing as a moderate or sane Republicon, it's that simple. Have you heard Paul's domestic agenda? He's a kook.
rcandrewz replies:
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noloyalisti, the proper and more relevant questions are have you read his domestic policies or The Constitution for that matter or do you just get your facts off the backs of buses?

Lets start with a history lesson.

The Untied States Constitution was designed to SAVE us from government not ENSLAVE us to it.

What is EXTREME are people like you who have this dangerous notion that we need government to protect us from ourselves.

Don't be scared be prepared, vote for freedom and liberty!

And remember freedom means freedom from government and the essence of that freedom is the proper LIMITATION of government not the EXCESS of it.

I would give you an economics lesson but right now I need for you to let that sink in first because it is obvious that single digit IQ you been toting around just might explode with too much factual information.

Ron Paul 2012 - 2020 because it is going to take that long just to START restoring this country back to the great republic it once was, before democrats and republicans came along and committed suicide form the basement window.
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angrygnat says:
Yah, Ron Paul is out of step with the main body of GOP warmongers but if you'll all think back to '08 he was out of step with all the GOP national greatness socialists too... the party came his way on those social issues and will come his way on the foreign policy issues as well, maybe not this time around, but evenually the small government argument will hit the military industrial complex in the gut as well. You can't be a "small government" republican and support endless adventurism across the globe, empire abroad promotes tyranny at home and that lesson needs to be absorbed before the GOP base will convert.
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nfirm says:
"Paul's hostility to the U.S.-Israeli military alliance is so notorious that the Republican Jewish Coalition has twice banned him from candidate forums, labeling him a 'virulent and harsh critic of Israel.'"

Ugh. Too bad the Republican Jewish Coalition doesn't care what Isreal thinks about the issue. Netanyahu's comments to Congress don't seem to be in contrast of Ron Paul's position. I guess that makes Netanyahu a virulent and harsh critic of Israel also...
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