| Ron Paul: McCain friends with Feingold, Kennedy Mark Silva After the smoke cleared at the Conservative Political Action Conference – the public withdrawal of Mitt Romney from the Republican presidential race, and the attempt of John McCain to make friends with the party’s staunchest conservatives – a conservative crowd-pleaser stepped forward . Ron Paul, the Republican representative from Texas. Paul was playing on the frustrations in this hall, with many voicing worries about McCain, the all-but annointed nominee. Now the party has an apparent candidate who is a friend of Sen. Russ Feingold – on campaign finance reform – Paul said. And now the party has an apparent candidate who is a friend of Ted Kennedy – on immigration – Paul said. He raised cheers in the hall – perhaps the first genuine cheers of the day.
“If you think we can lead this country back to conservative principles… you have another thing coming, because it’s not going to happen,’’ Paul said.
“As long as a government can stir up fear, sometimes real and sometimes not real, the people are expected to do one thing, sacrifice their liberty,’’ he said to cheers. And then there is the war in Iraq, with Paul the only one of several
Republican candidates for president this year who took a stance against
the war. “We campaigned in 2000 for a humble foreign policy, no policing of the world – and now we are doing the very same thing,’’ Paul said. But this is where he started to lose his audience: “Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.’’ The Paulites in the hall were happy, but the rest of the crowd was starting to part ways with a Republican who has sharply parted ways with most of the candidates. Yet, while the Romney folds his tent, the Paul campaign carries on.
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