Archive for the ‘Rand Paul’ Category

Rand Paul headlining GOP rally in La. Senate race

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Republican Senate candidate Bill Cassidy finally got the tea party assist Monday that he sought in his bid to oust Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu, drawing the endorsement of his former GOP competitor and rallying with Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.

Tea partyer Rob Maness is urging the more than 202,000 people who voted for him in last week's midterm election to cast ballots for Cassidy in the Dec. 6 runoff a coalition that could give Cassidy a decided edge over Landrieu.

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Rand Paul headlining GOP rally in La. Senate race

Rand Paul Calls Out Obama Over ISIL War

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul doesn't exactly see eye to eye with President Obama on the use of military force against the Islamic State group.

In politics, its been said, timing is everything. It seems that Sen. Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, has learned the lesson well.

Todays Big Read comes from Paul, who regularly shows up on the short list of 2016 GOP presidential contenders. The Daily Beast has posted a scathing essay by Paul, declaring that President Barack Obamas decision to use military force against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria violates the 1973 War Powers Act. Its not the first time Paul, a libertarian and tea party darling, has gone to the rhetorical mat (or hit the Senate debate floor) with the White House over the use of force overseas.

[READ: Iran's Shadow War in Iraq]

That Paul chose to do so on Veterans Day, just days after the president sent 1,500 more troops to the region as military advisers - a move that raises the spectre of President Lyndon Johnsons famous escalation of the Vietnam War - and referenced Vietnam-era anti-war legislation gives Paul extra style points. The capper, however, comes when he references Secretary of State John Kerry, a Vietnam veteran who won fame, and launched his political career testifying against the war but now must defend the White House over what Paul argues is the very same thing:

When I asked him at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing how on Gods green Earth a resolution to use force against the perpetrators of 9/11 in Afghanistan could be construed to apply to the Islamic State in Iraq in 2014, he replied that it didnt matter. The president could justify basically any war making as an Article II power.

Though hes constantly ranked with the likes of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and fellow Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas as a Republican presidential candidate, Paul has a few uphill battles. Hes polling at around 3 percent nationally, and in head-to-head comparisons with Hillary Clinton, the presumed but undeclared Democratic contender, Paul falls by double-digits.

Yet at a time when the post-9/11 combat veterans we purportedly honor each struggle with higher-than-average rates of joblessness, suicide, mental health and substance abuse problems, homelessness and domestic violence - and just 0.5 percent of the nations population even volunteers to serve, compared to 12 percent during World War II - Pauls larger point resonates.

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Rand Paul Calls Out Obama Over ISIL War

Rand Paul pens foreword for book by Confederate apologist and 9/11 conspiracy theorist

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul has penned the foreword for a new book by Andrew Napolitano, a Fox News legal analyst who has peddled 9/11 conspiracy theories, denounced Abraham Lincoln as a tyrant in his prosecution of the Civil War, and defended Jack Hunter, the former Paul aide whose neo-Confederate writings came to light last year.

In the foreword to Napolitanos Suicide Pact: The Radical Expansion of Presidential Powers and the Assault on Civil Liberties, Paul writes,Now President Obama says he just wants to balance liberty and national security. Judge Napolitano succinctly answers President Obama. To Napolitano, it isnt possible to balance rights and security because rights and [national security] are essentially andmetaphysically so different that they cannot be balanced against each other.

Judge Napolitano gets it, Paul later adds, and I hope his new book will help the American public to get it;to wake up and mount a defense of our most precious liberties before its too late.

The left-leaning watchdog group Media Matters first reported the details of Pauls foreword.

Paul, whos likely to mount a presidential bid in 2016, is certain to face questions over why he agreed to write the foreword to a book written by a conspiracy-minded polemicist, even as Paul seeks to portray himself as a mainstream candidate.

The senator and Napolitano share a mutual acquaintance in the far-right radio host Alex Jones, on whose program Paul frequently appeared until he became a U.S. senator and he realized that fraternizing with the fringe conspiracy theorist was impolitic. Jones program has been a forum for Napolitano to spout his own conspiracy theories about the 9/11 terrorist attacks, about which he asserts the government isnt being truthful.Its hard for me to believe that [World Trade Center building 7] came down by itself, Naptolitano told Jones in 2010. I think twenty years from now, people will look at 9-11 the way we look at the assassination of JFK today. It couldnt possibly have been done the way the government told us.

As Media Matters documents, Napolitano has also denounced Abraham Lincoln, decrying that the 16th president has been mythologized by historians and arguing that slavery would have died a natural death without Lincolns murderous war. In Suicide Pact the book Paul foreworded Napolitano continues to castigate Lincoln, writing that he suspended natural rights, disobeyed lawful orders of the Supreme Court, and arrested newspaper publishers and elected officials who disagreed with him, all while reflecting the profoundly, embarrassingly immoral white supremacist attitudes of his day. According to Media Matters, Paul writes in his foreword,Lincoln said any man can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man give him power. Even Lincoln sometimes failed that test, as Judge Napolitano recounts in Lincolns suspension of habeas corpus; the test is nonetheless one that challenges liberty lovers everywhere.

Last year, Napolitano expressed support for Hunter, who voiced remarkably similar ideas about Lincoln in his role in columns and on a radio program as the Southern Avenger. Hunter lauded Lincolns assassin, John Wilkes Booth, waxed nostalgic for the Confederacy, and defended the right of Southern states to secede. But according to Napolitano, all Hunter had done was spoken favorably of states rights, and negatively of Lincoln. Hunters critics, Napolitano wrote,cant seem to recognize that states rightseven secessiondoes not equal racism; it constitutes a brake on the feds march to totalitarianism.

It would be far from surprising had Rands father, Ron Paul, written the foreword to a book by a man who has conveyed these ideas. But as he gears up for 2016, Rand Paul is not-so-subtly attempting to distance himself from his fathers association with far-right and neo-Confederate activists. In an Octoberprofile by the New Yorkers Ryan Lizza, Paul said he was never associated with right-wing extremists. Ever. Only through being related to my dad, who had association with them.

Moreover, Pauls association with Napolitano is curious given the senators efforts to court African-American support. This summer, Paul spoke out on the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri, before even some prominent Democrats, including Hillary Clinton, weighed in. He has also championed criminal justice reform;questioned the GOPs focus on voter identification laws, which disproportionately disenfranchise black voters; and appeared before predominantly African-American audiences, including at the recent National Urban League conference in Cincinnati.

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Rand Paul pens foreword for book by Confederate apologist and 9/11 conspiracy theorist

Rand Paul headlines GOP rally in La. Senate race

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Republican Senate candidate Bill Cassidy finally got the tea party assist Monday that he sought in his bid to oust Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu, drawing the endorsement of his former GOP competitor and rallying with Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.

Tea partyer Rob Maness is urging the more than 202,000 people who voted for him in last week's midterm election to cast ballots for Cassidy in the Dec. 6 runoff a coalition that could give Cassidy a decided edge over Landrieu.

"I'm very confident that you'll see as I do that he is a man of faith, who loves our country, loves Louisiana, loves his family and loves these United States," Maness said at a GOP "unity rally." A vote for anyone else, he added, "is a victory for Barack Obama and that, my friends, is not an option."

Paul described last week's election and the Republican gains made in Congress as a "repudiation of the president and his policies," calling Landrieu a rubber stamp for the president.

"It's time to bring her home," he said in a packed Huey's Bar, named after Louisiana's most famous Democratic politician Huey Long.

The twin endorsements came during the first full week of political battle between Cassidy and Landrieu, who aired an ad questioning Cassidy's fitness for office. The spot, launched Sunday during the New Orleans Saints football game, featured quick cuts from a May 31 speech in which Cassidy appears to stumble over words and repeat himself.

"We'd lose Mary Landrieu's clout for this?" the narrator says.

Questioned about the ad, Cassidy's campaign spokesman John Cummins steered again to the unpopular president, saying: "Mary Landrieu may prefer the speaking style of President Obama, but Dr. Cassidy is focused on working hard, knowing the issues and representing the people of Louisiana, not Barack Obama."

Even if Landrieu wins the runoff, she will lose her Senate energy committee chairmanship in January to a Republican. The GOP won at least seven seats, enough for the majority, last week in the midterm elections. The Alaska Senate race has not been called for either Democratic Sen. Mark Begich or Republican Dan Sullivan.

Landrieu and Cassidy, who were the top two vote-getters in Louisiana's all-candidate primary Tuesday, advanced to the runoff. But the GOP rout nationally has taken some of the urgency out of Landrieu's pitch.

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Rand Paul headlines GOP rally in La. Senate race

Former RNC chair Steele: Rand Paul is the 2016 Republican frontrunner – Video


Former RNC chair Steele: Rand Paul is the 2016 Republican frontrunner
Michael Steele on Meet the Press 11/2/14.

By: bxtidre7

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Former RNC chair Steele: Rand Paul is the 2016 Republican frontrunner - Video