Public Eye
November 7, 2007 10:04 AM

Ron Paul, Validated and Vindicated?

By
Matthew Felling
Topics
In The News
139084If you build it, they will come.

If by 'it' you mean a campaign war chest, and by 'they' you mean the media.

Ladies and gentlemen, meet the newly-validated Ron Paul, who set an all-time GOP mark for one-day campaign fundraising on Monday, according to the Associated Press:
Paul's total deposed Mitt Romney as the single-day fundraising record holder in the Republican presidential field. When it comes to sums amassed in one day, Paul now ranks only behind Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton, who raised nearly $6.2 million on June 30, and Barack Obama.
Ron Paul's big haul was proof that he is the candidate of the Internet constituency this year – with supporters devoting a website to the one-day effort – no doubt aided by linking it to Guy Fawkes and the Wachowski Brothers' film "V for Vendetta."

(I mean, really. Can you imagine a better hook for Internet people than the guys who made the "Matrix" movies?)

And in light of his record-breaking day, the news media are beginning to cover him as more than a curiosity. The Boston Herald rang up a Harvard professor to pooh-pooh the avalanche of cash and interest:
"If you are on that third tier of candidates, attention is the biggest part of the game. He now has two months to try and transform this little bit of impetus into something more substantial, but my sense is that he won't get the traction," saidThomas Patterson of Harvard's JFK School of Government.
The Washington Post's political blogger extraordinaire Chris Cilizza broke down the What It Means angle:
The practical impact of Paul's surprising fundraising strength is that he will have the money to be on television in early states in a major way from here on out. Paul is already up with two television ads in New Hampshire (watch them here and here). While the ads are somewhat amateurish -- they lack the fancy production values of commercials produced by Romney, for example -- they get across Paul's central message: we need to get out of Iraq and we need to return to the basic governing principles laid out in the Constitution.
And then this morning, Paul got a solid segment on CNN that finally consisted of more than "Why are you bothering?" or "Do you seriously think you have a shot?" — even ending with co-anchor John Roberts adding "A awful lot of what he says makes a lot of sense." (Thank you, TVEyes)

So Ron Paul's big day drew some attention from the news media. And it's also going to buy some ads to spread the word even further. It's an interesting development that will create a dynamic that the GOP contenders must address in the next month.

As for now, though, he's still the 16 seed on the first day of the NCAA tournament.

He's the tree falling in the woods, without much media exposure, and making a deafening noise.

He's Howard Dean without the scream.

But he's making a serious move, if only on to force people to pay attention to his message.

Paul's supporters tied the fundraising drive to "Guy Fawkes" day, commemorating his attempt to blow up Parliament on the 5th of November in 1605 and inspiring a poem that began "Remember, remember the fifth of November …"

Regardless of what happens to Ron Paul and his candidacy, political strategists and academics will be remembering this fifth of November for some time.

(Correction: An earlier version of this post indicated that Ron Paul's campaign staff was reponsible for the November 5th event. The fundraising drive was conducted by his supporters nationwide.)

Add a Comment See all 33 Comments
by mattcat25 November 10, 2007 2:19 AM EST
Ron Paul is speaking common sense and, from what I%u2019ve seen he is gaining support amongst Republican Supporters that are have grown weary, or leery of the double speak and negative results of this particular Administration%u2019s policies.

We have one year now until the next Presidential Election and the only thing that the Republican Party is depending on is that Americans will continue to vote against their better interests. Will the Republican Party listen to their supporters? Or, will the GOP continue to force their agenda at the detriment of Americans?
Reply to this comment
by heyzuice November 10, 2007 2:04 AM EST
I have yet to meet a person that after a little consideration, thinks he doesn''t have a chance. The mainstream media is a dinosaur and is no longer as in controll as it thinks, the writers even know, hence the reson they are on strike. The few news people that still have the peoples respect keep insisting this election is going to hold a big surprise, and I''m betting they are talking about Dr Paul, so I hope you guys have some new job ideas because when the country is free we will no longer need anything accept the E channel for all our Britny and OJ needs.
Reply to this comment
by heyzuice November 10, 2007 2:03 AM EST
I have yet to meet a person that after a little consideration, thinks he doesn''t have a chance. The mainstream media is a dinosaur and is no longer as in controll as it thinks, the writers even know, hence the reson they are on strike. The few news people that still have the peoples respect keep insisting this election is going to hold a big surprise, and I''m betting they are talking about Dr Paul, so I hope you guys have some new job ideas because when the country is free we will no longer need anything accept the E channel for all our Britny and OJ needs.
Reply to this comment
by superbob26 November 9, 2007 7:28 PM EST
Through all the insults and negative insinuations, Ron Paul has stood tall and thus is slowly gaining respect. We need to follow his example.

When the media calls us crazy and writes us off as a bunch of X-Files conspiracy nuts, we should shrug and grin at their personal attacks and baffling level of incompetence.

When we are labeled as a coterie of computer hacks who are more "fans" than legitimately concerned citizens, we should just shake our head at the consistent misinformation.

When every positive statement towards our movement is qualified by citing rigged polling data, we should grit our teeth and move on.

When the establishment is incapable of recognizing and embracing true democracy, we should quietly vent our frustration.

But when they say Ron Paul cannot win. Then, we prove them wrong.

What we are doing is historic, and very soon the media will wonder why they did not see it coming. After all, he who refuses to see is the blindest.
Reply to this comment
by behinddrno November 8, 2007 11:59 PM EST
Just as Bill O%u2019Reilly stated, Ron Paul is crazy!
What sane politician would want to end uncontrolled spending?
What sane politician would want to return to a smaller government?
What sane politician would want to let the lowly citizen keep more of his paycheck?
What sane politician would want to end the funny money that allows them to borrow with no end?
What sane politician wants to be honest with his supporters?
What sane politician wants to have a single, unwavering opinion on every issue?
What sane politician wants to control the borders and decrease the flow of new social program dependent voters?
What sane politician wants to leave a gun in the hands of a lowly subject?
The logic continues with every crazy thing that Ron Paul stands for.

You have to admit, that for a politician, he is crazy!

The big mistake made my most people who call him crazy is that they are mistaking him for a %u201Creal politician%u201D.
He definitely is not a politician. He%u2019s a voice for the common people. He%u2019s honest. He%u2019s a patriot.
Reply to this comment
by behinddrno November 8, 2007 11:58 PM EST
Just as Bill O%u2019Reilly stated, Ron Paul is crazy!
What sane politician would want to end uncontrolled spending?
What sane politician would want to return to a smaller government?
What sane politician would want to let the lowly citizen keep more of his paycheck?
What sane politician would want to end the funny money that allows them to borrow with no end?
What sane politician wants to be honest with his supporters?
What sane politician wants to have a single, unwavering opinion on every issue?
What sane politician wants to control the borders and decrease the flow of new social program dependent voters?
What sane politician wants to leave a gun in the hands of a lowly subject?
The logic continues with every crazy thing that Ron Paul stands for.

You have to admit, that for a politician, he is crazy!

The big mistake made my most people who call him crazy is that they are mistaking him for a %u201Creal politician%u201D.
He definitely is not a politician. He%u2019s a voice for the common people. He%u2019s honest. He%u2019s a patriot.
Reply to this comment
by mickrussom November 8, 2007 4:42 PM EST
The election is in the Bag, Ron Paul, the next POTUS.

People are screaming FRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDOOOOOOOOM!

They will have to kill this guy like they did JFK and RK to stop him.
Reply to this comment
by nmlifestyles November 8, 2007 2:30 PM EST
How to Whip This Ron Paul Character and All His Whacky Followers.

Ron Paul can be defeated by ignorance. Ignore him if you can.
By lies. Misrepresent his positions whenever possible.
By word gaming. As Lenin advised, ?First, confuse the vocabulary.?
By contempt. Dismiss him as amusing and pathetic.
By smearing his supporters. Find the worst and spotlight them. Call them a cult.
By consensus. Dismiss him with peer-pressure ridicule.
By false accusations. Spread them quickly and far.
By never discussing his policies. Change the subject to his person.
By the polls. Ask the right people the right questions and get the answer you want.
By reporting his most unpopular votes. But don?t report his reasoning.
By rudeness. Wreck any debate where his ideas are winning.
With all these tools, he can be easily defeated. Use them generously.

But Ron Paul cannot be defeated by refuting him in an honest and courteous technical debate. Avoid that.

- Moderno Machiavelli
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by freedom_usa November 8, 2007 2:23 AM EST
Ron Paul is the guy that arrives on the scene at the right time in history. He has inspired me to be a more active American in the political feild.
Reply to this comment
by roiq November 8, 2007 1:47 AM EST
I''m not in this world
To live up to your expectations
Neither are you here to live up to mine.

Don''t underestimate
My ability
Don''t defamate my character
Don''t belittle
My authority
It is time you recognized my quality

I AM THAT I AM - Peter Tosh

LEARN TO LOVE

Let''s get ready to be free for the first time in our lives, America!
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