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Libertarian getting Republican attention

Presidential hopeful draws crowd in Las Vegas



Photo by Ralph Fountain.



Photo by Ralph Fountain.

In a nondescript meeting room in the convention area of a Strip casino, a love-in was taking place on Saturday.

A crowd of about 350 people was on its feet, whistling, clapping, and chanting their man's name. Banners, T-shirts and bumper stickers bore the words, "Ron Paul REVOLUTION," with the letters "EVOL" backwards and in red: love.

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  • (It happens to be the same gimmick as the Revolution lounge attached to the Beatles-themed Cirque de Soleil show at the MGM Grand, but the Paul campaign says they thought of it first.)

    Audience member Elizabeth Belcastro, a 22-year-old Las Vegan who works at the Star Trek Experience, said she did see Paul as preaching love: "love for the country."

    Paul, a Republican running for president, also seemed eager to emphasize that, despite his nickname of "Dr. No," his philosophy is not just oppositional -- that his message, like every other presidential candidate's, is one of hope for America.

    He talked about improving education and health care and lifting people out of poverty, all of which, he said, could be achieved by government leaving people alone.

    Libertarians, he said, must not allow themselves to be portrayed as uncaring.

    "We lose the intellectual argument because we allow the other side to say, 'We're the ones who care' ... not realizing they're sowing the seeds of destruction for the liberty they pretend to cherish," he said.

    In 1988, Paul ran for president on the Libertarian ticket, but this time, the Texas congressman is trying to win over the Republican Party. His inclusion in Republican televised debates has given him a platform a third-party candidate wouldn't have.

    He has stood out in those debates with his distinctive stances, especially his opposition to the war in Iraq and his contention that U.S. foreign policy was partly at fault for the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, both views stemming from his noninterventionist view of foreign affairs.

    His nickname comes from the fact that he is a physician and votes against any federal legislation that goes against his strictly literal interpretation of the Constitution. The convergence of two factors -- a Republican base receptive to new messages and the connective power of the Internet -- have catapulted Paul out of political obscurity.

    Despite polling in the single digits, Paul claims to have more cash on hand in his campaign account than his better-known rival John McCain, $2.4 million to $2 million.

    Many of those in the audience Saturday at Paris Las Vegas came from a Las Vegas Paul fan group started on Meetup.com. Paul was in Las Vegas to attend the weekend's FreedomFest convention, but his local supporters got him to do the campaign event as well, and it was standing room only.

    The crowd skewed young for the 71-year-old candidate. Many were college students, including University of Nevada, Las Vegas, economics major Brandon Robison, who ran for an Assembly seat as a Libertarian last year.

    Robison said he will change his registration to Republican to vote for Paul in the presidential nominating caucuses in January. He also turned his girlfriend, Ashley Mayer, on to Paul's message.

    Mayer said she did her own research on Paul and watched him in the debates and was drawn to his argument that U.S. involvement overseas contributed to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

    "It makes sense," she said. "We were in their country trying to police them. We need to bring everybody back and deal with what we have here."

    Taking the lectern, Paul said of the enthusiasm his campaign inspires, "I'm really sometimes surprised and bewildered and pleased. And I end up saying, well, it may be that freedom is popular."

    In the Paul movement, he noted, "We have conservatives and liberals and libertarians and constitutionalists, and sometimes we even get the anarchists in."

    Paul wants to repeal the Patriot Act and ensure that all U.S. prisoners have full access to courts and the right of habeas corpus. He has repeatedly introduced legislation to pull the United States out of the United Nations. He wants to end the welfare system, to phase out Social Security and to abolish public education.

    "We have to start reducing the role for government," he said. "Instead of policing the world and running a welfare state, government should be there to protect liberty."

    America is spending too much money overseas on policies that masquerade as defense but are actually militarism, he said.

    "We need to quit it," he said. "We need to bring our troops home, not only the troops from Iraq, but from Afghanistan, the Middle East, Europe and Korea -- we have troops in 130 countries."

    Some of Paul's more obscure positions, like wanting to return American currency to the gold standard, were also hits with the crowd. He got a standing ovation for the line, "We don't want a national ID card."

    Victoria Miranda, a Las Vegan involved in the Meetup group, said the group was growing so fast it would soon need a new venue for its monthly meetings.

    Miranda is five months pregnant with her second child and wore a demure lace jacket and earrings shaped like flowers.

    She said she was once a single mother who couldn't afford health care; if the government weren't taking money out of her paycheck and the free market were in charge, she said, she believed she would have been better off.

    "I'm only 30 years old and I've never been politically involved," she said. "But what he says just really makes sense to me."



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    Jennifer wrote on July 27, 2007 07:30 PM: I would just like to thank you for writing such a refreshing story WITH OUT a conveniently included political bias. Dr. Ron Paul has a straight forward message and it is nice to hear it in the main stream media for a change.


    Elizabeth wrote on July 16, 2007 12:38 AM: This is a very well-written article. Thank you very much for your accurate description of events and Dr. Paul's platform. Dr. Paul's message hasn't been recieving the equal attention it deserves, and the little attention he does get somehow gets skewed and misrepresented. So again, thank you for your accuracy Ms. Ball.


    Beytovin wrote on July 09, 2007 01:46 PM: Morpheus,

    The poll will report whatever it was commissioned to report. Just like statistics- we all know how to manipulate them. Hey, I heard something like 101.432% of all statistics are fabricated... :)


    Morpheus wrote on July 09, 2007 12:40 PM: these scientific polls can't be all that good if someone who is polling at 1% can attract 350 people to his event. Because only 5-10% would be motivated enough to go see him. Either those 350 people are very motivated, which i am sure they are or the polls are not worth the paper they are written on.

    Now that Paul has some more money to spend he is now "elevated to a 2nd tier" this also stinks. The Media is using the amount of money that a candidate has to spend with them as a measure on how he will be received. Who determines the elect ability of a candidate: the media or the PEOPLE?

    Thank you for the great article!


    Jen wrote on July 09, 2007 12:18 PM: Thanks for this great article. I really enjoyed reading it.


    James Louis Barber wrote on July 09, 2007 09:42 AM: I just thought the headline 'Libertarian getting Republican attention' was a bit misleading. If he once ran as a Democrat would you say 'Democrat getting Republican attention'? I know he has strong libertarian leanings (small L) but he has been a Republican congressman for ten terms.

    All in all though, I am very grateful for your coverage of this event. I know Dr. Paul feels that Nevada is very important.

    So a big thank you from me, Jimmy Barber


    Mark Warden wrote on July 09, 2007 07:29 AM: There was a tremendously diverse crowd at the Ron Paul rally, from punk band-tpyes with mohawks to straight-laced, mainstream Republicans. Dr. Paul's message of liberty resonates with everyone.
    Molly, I didn't hear Dr. Paul say that he wants to "abolish public eduation" as you put it; but he definitely wants to end FEDERAL funding and regulation of education and leave the educating to the states.


    Editor gal wrote on July 08, 2007 10:53 PM: Who's your fact-checker? LOVE and the ReLOVEution lounge are at Mirage.


    Whitetop wrote on July 08, 2007 09:25 PM: Ron Paul truly is giving us hope for America--hope for a future for our children and grandchildren.


    Mrs,A Cooper wrote on July 08, 2007 07:23 PM: Thank You Ms. Molly Ball and to the RJ for such a refreshing article about Ron Paul. It looks like we may have hope in a change of direction for our country yet. Maybe instead of calling him hopeful maybe we should change that to WE. We should be so lucky to have a president like that!