Rand Paul: Conviction Politician. By Michael Gerson.
Rand Paul: Conviction Politician. By Michael Gerson. Real Clear Politics, July 19, 2013. Also at the Washington Post.
Gerson:
To this
point, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky has been the Republican flavor of the year.
Events from the IRS scandal to NSA revelations to the Obamacare train wreck
have corroborated libertarian suspicions of federal power. And Paul has shown
serious populist skills in cultivating those fears for his political benefit.
For a while, he succeeded in a difficult maneuver: accepting the inheritance of
his father’s movement while distancing himself from the loonier aspects of his
father’s ideology.
But now
Paul has fallen spectacularly off the tightrope. It turns out that a senior
member of his Senate staff, Jack Hunter, has a history of neo-Confederate radio rants. And Paul has come to the defense of his aide.
Paul’s
attempt to dismiss the matter has only added to the damage. “It was a shock
radio job,” the senator explains. “He was doing wet T-shirt contests. But can a
guy not have a youth and stuff? People try to say I smoked pot one time, and I
wasn’t fit for office.”
But
Hunter’s offenses were committed as an adult. They included defending a regime
founded on slavery, comparing Abraham Lincoln to Saddam Hussein and raising (in
Hunter’s words) a “personal toast every May 10 to celebrate John Wilkes Booth’s
birthday.” This was not a single, ideological puff but rather a decade spent
mainlining moonlight and magnolias in the ruins of Tara.
Paul is
rumored to be considering a 2016 presidential run. So his dismissal of the
sympathetic treatment of a presidential assassin as the equivalent of sponsoring
a wet T-shirt contest requires some explanation. The easier political course
for Paul would have been to cut this embarrassing tie and reduce the damage. He
still might be forced to do so. But his reluctance is revealing.
This
would not be the first time that Paul has heard secessionist talk in his circle
of confederates — I mean, associates. His father has attacked Lincoln for
causing a “senseless” war and ruling with an “iron fist.” Others allied with
Paulism in various think tanks and Web sites have accused Lincoln of mass
murder and treason. For Rand Paul to categorically repudiate such views and all
who hold them would be to excommunicate a good portion of his father’s
movement.
This
disdain for Lincoln is not a quirk or a coincidence. Paulism involves more than
the repeal of Obamacare. It is a form of libertarianism that categorically
objects to 150 years of expanding federal power. During this period, the main
domestic justification for federal action has been opposition to slavery and
segregation. Lincoln, in the Paulite view, exercised tyrannical powers to
pursue an unnecessary war. Similarly, Paulites have been critical of the 1964 Civil Rights Act for violating both states’ rights and individual property
rights — an argument Rand Paul himself echoed during several interviews as a
Senate candidate.
This
does not make Paulites racists. But it does make them opponents of the legal
methods that ended state-sanctioned racism.
To put
the best construction on it, Paulites tend to hate war and federal coercion in
any form, even in causes generally regarded as good. They opposed the Cold War
and nearly every post-World War II American exercise of power. They equate the
war on terrorism with militarism, imperialism and empire. And they remain unhappy
about the War of Northern Aggression.
Not all
libertarians, of course, view Appomattox as a temporary setback. A libertarian
debate on the topic: “Lincoln: Hero or Despot?” would be two-sided, lively and
well-attended. But Paulism is more than the political expression of the
Austrian school of economics. It is a wildly ambitious ideology in which
Hunter’s neo-Confederate views are not uncommon.
What
does this mean for the GOP? It is a reminder that, however reassuring his
manner, it is impossible for Rand Paul to join the Republican mainstream. The
triumph of his ideas and movement would fundamentally shift the mainstream and
demolish a century and a half of Republican political history. The GOP could no
longer be the party of Reagan’s internationalism or of Lincoln’s belief in a
strong union dedicated to civil rights.
The
Hunter matter is also a reminder that Paul is a conviction politician. His
convictions, however, are the problem. In January, Hunter wrote that the
“philosophy hasn’t substantively changed” between Ron Paul and his son. Rand
Paul’s goal is to legitimize the Paulite movement, not repudiate its worst
elements. But his ties to those elements may put an upward limit on his
political rise.