Ron Paul, spoiler? By George Will, Washington Post, December 9, 2011
On
Oct. 12, 1948, the campaign train of
Tom Dewey, the Republican nominee against
President Harry Truman, pulled into Beaucoup,
Ill., where, from the rear platform, he would
speak to about 1,000 people. Before he began,
the engineer mistakenly caused the train to
lurch a few feet backward, frightening some but
injuring none.
Dewey, however, hurt himself by angrily saying
into the microphone, “That’s the first lunatic
I’ve had for an engineer. He probably ought to
be shot at sunrise.” Dewey’s “cold arrogance”
(Truman biographer David McCullough’s
description) reinforced the public’s impression
of an unsympathetic and prickly politician.
Truman ran against a Republican-controlled
Congress but won because Dewey was off-putting.
And Truman won despite two splinter candidacies
from his party — those of former vice president
Henry Wallace on the left and South Carolina
Gov. Strom Thurmond on the right. Each won 2.4
percent of the popular vote.
Because Thurmond’s support was regionally
concentrated, he won 39 southern electoral
votes. If Truman had lost two of three states —
Ohio, Illinois and California (he won them by
just 7,000 votes, 34,000 and 18,000,
respectively) — no candidate would have won an
electoral vote majority, and the House of
Representatives would have picked the president.
If Dewey had won all three, he would have been
president.
So, small vote totals for independent
candidacies can have huge potential
consequences. Which brings us to Ron Paul.
When recently asked if he might mount an
independent candidacy,
he said: “I’m not thinking about it
because, look, I’m not doing badly right now.
. . . So we concentrate only on one thing: Keep
moving up in the polls, and see how things come
out in a month or two.”
He is in the top tier in Iowa and would alienate
Republican voters if he indicated an interest in
bolting the party next autumn. Nationally, his
ceiling is low, but his floor is solid: His
supporters are inclined to accept no substitutes
because no other candidate espouses anything
like his high-octane blend of libertarianism and
isolationism.
Furthermore, he is now nationally known (he
campaigned for the
2008 Republican nomination and was
the Libertarian Party’s 1988 presidential
candidate) and has a large base of small donors.
His intense supporters probably could get his
name on most states’ ballots. He is not seeking
reelection to his
House seat, so what has he got to
lose?
Well, his candidacy might guarantee Barack
Obama’s reelection, and this might hurt the
career of his son
Rand, the freshman senator from
Kentucky. Other than that, however, Ron Paul may
think what his ideology implies — that Obama is
only marginally more mistaken than Paul’s
Republican rivals, who do not wake up each day
angry about the
1913 Federal Reserve Act.
So, assume three things. That Obama is weaker in
2012 than he was when winning just
53 percent of the vote in 2008. That
Paul could win between 5 percent and 7 percent
of the vote nationally (much less than the 18
percent that a recent
NBC-Wall Street Journal poll showed were
prepared to vote for Paul as an independent).
And that at least 80 percent of Paul’s votes
would come at the expense of the Republican
nominee.
Based on states’ results in 2000, 2004 and 2008,
and on states’ previous votes for third-party
candidates, and on current polling about the
strength of potential Republican nominees in
particular states, it is plausible to conclude
that a Paul candidacy would have these
consequences:
●It would enable Obama to carry two states he
lost in 2008: Missouri (11 electoral votes),
which he lost by 0.13 points, and Arizona (11),
which he lost by 8.52 points to native son John
McCain.
●It would enable Obama to again win four states
he captured in 2008 and that the Republican
nominee probably must win in 2012: Florida (29),
Indiana (11), North Carolina (15) and Virginia
(13).
●It would secure Obama’s hold on the following
states he won in 2008 but that Republicans hope
to take back next year: New Mexico (5), Colorado
(9), Nevada (6), Michigan (16), Ohio (18),
Pennsylvania (20) and New Hampshire (4).
At a minimum, a Paul candidacy would force the
Republican nominee to spend time and money in
places he otherwise might be able to economize
both. And a Paul candidacy would make 2012 much
easier for Obama than 2008 was. Now, reread
Paul’s words quoted above, particularly these:
“right now” and “in a month or two.” |
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