Rand Paul Presidential Rumors Begin
By Carl Wicklander on 11/21/2012 in 2016, Kentucky, Rand Paul with 17 CommentsRead Time: 5 - 8 minutes
(Credit: Gage Skidmore)
In an interview with ABC News, Kentucky US Senator Rand Paul confessed he is considering a presidential run in 2016:
“I want to be part of the national debate. I think it’s a little too soon to talk about who’s going to run, who’s not going to run. . . . Am I interested in thinking about that? Yes. . . . I’m not going to deny I’m interested.”
It’s a little wishy-washy, but neither is it surprising – we were hearing names of potential candidates as soon as Ohio was called for President Obama.
The problem with many of the names thrown out at this point for 2016 is that they are all relative newbies: Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Paul Ryan, Rand Paul, Bob McDonnell, Nikki Haley, or heaven forbid, Sarah Palin. Others include Jeb Bush, Chris Christie, and Bobby Jindal.
If any or most of these candidates in the first group run, there is a real risk that they will cancel each other out in the way the “conservative alternative” candidates did in the race to be the “not-Romney” (remember when Mitt Romney was unacceptably moderate?). However, if there’s a noticeable difference between 2016 and the two previous cycles it’s that there will be no clear “runner-up” in the way John McCain and Romney were.
The possibility of Rand Paul running for president in 2016 is tantalizing for many who supported his father, Ron Paul, in the last two cycles. There is going to be a lot of interest and pressure for Rand Paul to run because four years after Ron Paul’s retirement may be the best chance to hold the tenuous coalition together, a coalition that to date has not won the popular vote in a single presidential primary state. A Rand Paul candidacy holds the possibility of peeling off religious and fiscal conservatives from other candidates in a way Ron Paul never did, but with a field likely to be crowded, it isn’t an inevitability either.
So far Rand Paul has held up fairly well in the US Senate. He’s not been an explicitly “Ron Paul Republican,” but he has taken important stands to hold up extensions of the Patriot Act, indefinite detention, and to cut off foreign aid to anti-American regimes as well as bringing much-needed attention to the ways Washington bureaucrats abuse and infiltrate Americans’ lives. In my ideal world, he would advocate cutting off all foreign aid – including to Israel – and be a little more strictly realist or non-interventionist in his foreign policy statements. Senator Paul hasn’t ruled out all foreign aid, which is a piddly issue anyway, but in the big picture he’s also been a lot more pro-liberty and mindful of the Constitution than practically any other US Senator.
But Rand Paul has electoral issues to deal with before he runs for president. Like fellow presidential prospect Marco Rubio, 2016 is not just a presidential election year, but the year for re-election to the US Senate. Paul’s approval rating in Kentucky is decent, about 53%, but it’s not a foregone conclusion that Kentuckians will enshrine him in the US Senate either.
Short of a scandal or a major deviation from conservative orthodoxy, Paul isn’t likely to face a primary challenge in 2016 and with Paul family operative Jesse Benton working on Mitch McConnell’s re-election team, it appears the two Kentucky US Senators are willing to coexist.
In 2016, the Democrats may have some strong options for an opponent and just because Kentucky consistently votes for Republican presidential candidates doesn’t mean the Bluegrass State is exempt from sending a moderate-sounding Democrat to Washington.
Two Kentucky Democrats the party may encourage to run are Governor Steve Beshear and soon-to-be-former congressman Ben Chandler. Beshear, who made a spirited run against McConnell in 1996 and whose term as governor expires in 2015 after two convincing victories, will be free to challenge Paul, but he will also be over seventy years old.
Chandler is Kentucky royalty: the grandson of former governor, US Senator, and baseball Hall-of-Famer “Happy” Chandler. But Chandler, who in 2011 predicted Paul would be “ripe for the picking,” lost the last statewide election he was in and he just lost his congressional seat to Republican Andy Barr, but as a big name in Kentucky, his vote for ObamaCare may very well be ancient history by 2016. There’s no guarantee either will challenge Paul, but there are political realities that must be tended to at home before the Ron Paul coalition hitches onto the Rand Paul presidential bandwagon.
We also simply don’t know where the American electorate will be in 2015 when candidates are declaring themselves. It’ll be the end of the second term of a president who served less than a full term in the US Senate and only a couple of State Senate terms before that. If the last of the luster has rubbed off Obama, there may be reluctance for either party to nominate a relatively untested candidate.
Republicans have spent much of the last four years critiquing Obama as too inexperienced when he came into office. This isn’t a problem unique to Paul, but if what’s described above is the political environment in 2015-2016, how does that candidate credibly justify his campaign having completed only one term, or less, in the US Senate or as governor when America is finishing up a, potentially, disconsolate two terms with a relative neophyte?
A Rand Paul presidential candidacy may very well be a good enterprise. If he continues on the track he’s begun he would be a huge boon to the Republican field, but there are other factors to consider. A crowded field is undoubtedly one of them and inexperience another. There’s no certainty that would face strong opposition anyway, but it would be an unqualified shame if in waging a doomed presidential campaign Rand Paul lost the platform he’s had to explicate his agenda, his US Senate seat.




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17 Comments
Chad Peace
11.21.2012
@Chad_Peace
He is the natural pick to bring some of the otherwise unconnected factions of the GOP together. Ron Paul + Tea Partiers + Conventional GOP … Rand Paul may be one of the only, if not the only, guy they can all stomach … even if they aren’t all 100% supportive of his libertarian conservatism.
William Boardman
11.21.2012
@williamboardman
Rand Paul as a great uniter? Really? ;-))))
Lucas Eaves
11.21.2012
@lucaseaves
He is still young. I could wait another round, make sure he wins his senate seat another time and get better know. Being the son of his dad will not be enough to make a credible candidature, nor should it.
William Boardman
11.21.2012
@williamboardman
And his accomplishments to date include…?????
Matt Metzner
11.21.2012
@mmetzner
I’m not ready to start talking about presidential candidates in 2016 yet. He’d be an interesting voice, how the GOP responds to this year’s loss could give him more clout.
Michael Higham
11.21.2012
@michaelhigham
I think a Rand Paul presidential run is almost necessary for the GOP, seeing as how he is a breath of fresh air and not your typical Republican. Of course, it’s too early to tell or speculate, Obama hasn’t even begun his 2nd term!
I’d like to see Chris Christie give it a go, reminds me of my dad. I think his carelessness for political correctness would resonate with the country!
William Boardman
11.21.2012
@williamboardman
Rand Paul strikes me as too rigid ever to take seriously,
by which I mean as anything but a minority candidate.
Christie, on the other hand, is clearly flexible,
and reasonably reality-based, making him a fun wild card.
Alex Gauthier
11.21.2012
@alexg
I don’t know if the Ron Paul supporters will be so quick to flock to Rand Paul, even though they wont have to change their campaign signs
Zachery Abramson
11.21.2012
@zabramso
We’ll have to see where they throw their support in the coming election cycle. The phrase Rand Paul Revolution doesn’t have quite the same lyrical ring as the Ron Paul Revolution.
Jane Susskind
11.21.2012
@jsusskind
Yeah after his actions in the 2012 election and his endorsement of Romney, I think Ron Paul supporters will not be as willing to rally behind him as they were his father.
Kumar
11.21.2012
Carl
A movement based on economism will never inspire the passion or loyalty as one based on blood.
Blacks voted 93% for Obama, Hispanics 73%, East Asians 74% as highly cohesive racial blocs. Unlike Hispanics and Blacks, East Asians are high income, not on Welfare teat, so Why did they vote for party of government?
Simple. East Asians also vote for their racial interests. Not on atomistic ideologies like Libertarianism, Conservatism, Democracy, Liberalism and all the rest.
But White vote was split. Whites are obsessed with ideologies. They can’t think beyond manchild wonkeries. Only 59% Whites voted for Romney and 90% of GOP vote came from Whites. If Whites had voted 75% for Romney, he would have won. So the lesson is, Rand Paul should reach out to the GOP white base.
Just as democracts advance the interests of Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, GOP should advance the interests of Whites. How to help White base:
1) Stop mass immigration. If Israel is a Jewish ethnostate designed to advance the interests of Jewish majority, why can’t US be a White ethnostate, designed to advance the interests of White majority. Are ethnic Jews importing non-Jews to reduce ethnic Jewish majority in Israel? So why are Whites stupidly importing non-Whites? This is the ultimate foolishness, which will lead to White extinction.
2) End all racial quotas and racial programs which give college admissions, jobs to non-Whites over Whites, cheap business loans to non-Whites to raid White businesses.
3) End all Departments, HUD, Education, Commerce which plunder Whites and gives their tax dollars to non-Whites.
4) Stop free trade foolishness which has devastated White working class as it ships their factories and jobs to China and floods them with mass immigration and suppresses their wages.
Thats how Rand Paul and other GOP Senate and House candidates can win.
Cassidy Noblejas Bartolomei
11.21.2012
@cassidynb
Will humanity still exist in 2016?! Just kidding. But I think it’s awfully early to be talking about the next presidential election. If there hasn’t been a revolution by then, I’m hoping Gary J. runs again .
John
11.21.2012
Ron Paul supporters dislike Rand, he endorced Romney instead of his own father. His politcal correct-ness makes him anotother posterboard canidate with filler and no direct awnsers. Ron Paul was different he had ideas that made sense, I don’t think the Ron Paul party would be so quick to accept him instead of the real deal, it would go against everything they belive in.
Kumar
11.21.2012
Only a worthless, dysfunctional minority of Ron’s followers hate Rand Paul. Rand Added 250,000 followers to his facebook page After he endorsed Romney.
Endorsing Romney was a strategic move to raise profile in the GOP and broaden the base. Those who cannot understand these political moves to advance freedom, are not worth talking to anyway.
Marc Schenker
11.23.2012
@marcschenker
I’m not to sure that Rand Paul’s purported candidacy would be a big boon to the GOP. He’s probably too libertarian-leaning for many in the party, and he doesn’t have that much name recognition, not to mention that he’s overshadowed by the name of his dad, Ron.
Naomi Took
11.28.2012
I want Paul’s ideas to keep being heard on a national stage. I do not want him to flame out with a failed presidential run.
Drew Martin
11.28.2012
@dmartin1010
Rand is the go to guy for the movement inspired by his father. He’s skilled enough as a politician to take the ideas of the liberty movement and actually implement them so that they can become tangible reality. He’s had a tremendous influence already in the Senate with his filibusters and stands against indefinite detention, more wars, and now standing firm with Grover Norquist to oppose taxes. Not to mention 8 out of 12 “Ron Paul Republicans” were elected to the House and Senate this election. It’s tough to tell now, but there’s plenty to indicate in four years time, Rand could easily become one of the leading faces of the GOP. I hope he does.