Ron Paul: Time to take him seriously

[Cross-posted at Infinite Monkeys.]

<dr.nick>Hello everybody!</dr.nick>

We're a week and a half away from Super Tuesday and I figured it was time to get off my butt and start shilling for the only Republican candidate worth voting for: Ron Paul

Dr. Paul was the subject of endless amusement 6-9 months ago. Who was going to vote for an anti-war libertarian in this big-government neo-con age? Well, that was then. In the last quarter of 2007, Ron Paul took in more donations than any other candidate (just shy $20 million) including not one but two single-day donation records. And unlike a lot of candidates, the vast majority of those donations were around $100. Also unlike the other candidates, the two record-setting days were organized completely by the grassroots, with no meaningful coordination from the central campaign. He just took in another $1.85 million on Monday in another grassroots "money bomb" timed to coincide with MLK day.

Last year, eleven different men announced their intention to seek the Republican nomination for President of the United States. Earlier this week, Fred Thompson (who was treated as a front-runner throughout - and even before - his campaign) became the sixth to abandon the campaign trail:

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Of the five that are left, there is no clear front-runner. Romney, McCain, and Huckabee have each won one or two primaries/caucuses, and the only momentum seems to be Rudy Giuliani's momentum in plummeting to the bottom. And the only two candidates that still have any significant amount of cash on hand are Romney (mostly his own) and Ron Paul.

Paul's got the institutional cards stacked against him: Fox News has already excluded him from one debate (they included Fred Thompson) and for a long time the ten-term U.S. Congressman from Texas was curiously absent from many voting guides, polls, and coverage. Even last weekend, when Paul came in second place in the Nevada caucus, Fox News covered the race as if he wasn't even in the running:

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As I mentioned, Paul wound up finishing ahead of McCain to take "the Silver" (as Romney likes to call it) in the Silver State.

All of this from a guy who everybody thought would be the Dennis Kucinich of the Republican party. Well, it ain't so.

But viability is, in my opinion, a minor point. Issues and record are what's REALLY important, and Paul's got this locked up for me. Over the next several days, I'll post about both, and about what differentiates him from the other four candidates. For a preview, take a look at his issues page.