Why We're Entering the Age of Ron Paul
Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) will no longer be actively campaigning
in forthcoming primaries for the Republican presidential
nomination. But the libertarian politician's legacy - including
controversial yet popular stands on everything from auditing the
Federal Reserve to withdrawing troops from abroad to radically
cutting government borrowing and spending - is just getting
started. Paul, says Brian Doherty, a Reason senior editor and
author of the new Ron Paul's Revolution: The Man and the Movement He
Inspired, "is leaving in his wake a set of institutions, and a
set of hundreds of thousands of energized intelligent youngsters
who are unquestionably going to shape American politics moving down
the line." Doherty argues Paul's long-term effect on the GOP will
be similar to that of Barry Goldwater, the Arizona senator who,
despite a crushing electoral loss to Lyndon Johnson in 1964,
energized and transformed the Republican Party into the
limited-government force that elected Ronald Reagan in 1980.
"His fans understand that Ron Paul is not just out to win an
election," says Doherty. "Even if the [party bosses] shut the door
in his face at the Republican convention as they did in 2008,...the
ideas he injected into the party [and politics] are not going away
anytime soon."
About 4:40 minutes. Produced by Sharif Matar, with camera by Matar
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