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HOLLYWOOD
11-27-2011, 08:47 AM
New Hampshire Takes Another Look At Ron Paul
http://www.npr.org/2011/11/27/142735953/new-hampshire-takes-another-look-at-ron-paul?ft=1&f=1003

by Jon Greenberg (http://news.nhpr.org/people/jon-greenberg)
Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Sunday (http://www.npr.org/templates/rundowns/rundown.php?prgId=10&prgDate=11-27-2011) will be available at approx. 12:00 p.m. ET

http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/11/23/paul_2012_9601663.jpg?t=1322347712&s=4
Cheryl Senter/AP
Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul of Texas is surrounded by supporters after
speaking at a town hall meeting in Keene, N.H., on Monday.

November 27, 2011 from NHPR (http://www.nhpr.org/)
In this presidential cycle, as in the last, there is no question which Republican candidate has the most ardent supporters: Ron Paul, the 76-year-old Texas congressman whose brand of libertarianism often puts him at odds with all of his rivals. But with less than seven weeks to go for the nation's first primary, there are signs that Paul could surprise people.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is sitting pretty in New Hampshire, where he has been the front-runner all year, so whoever comes in second in the Granite State isn't doing too shabbily.
"I could very well see Ron Paul coming in second place," said longtime pollster Andy Smith, who runs the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.

Smith's numbers last week show Paul in third with 12 percent, up from just a month ago. Other alternatives to Romney have risen to double digits only to fall back again, but Smith says Paul has some key advantages.
"He's got more money than other candidates, and he seems to have a more committed young following," he said. "Those young voters [are] always important on the campaign trail because they essentially will work for free and they're very enthusiastic about Paul."
Last week at Keene State College, Paul was clearly finding his campaign's sweet spot. More than 300 people packed at town hall meeting, many of them students. Paul launched his remarks with his signature call to return the dollar to the gold standard. He then talked of his plan to bring home American troops from across the globe.

"I don't believe we have the right or the authority to tell other people what to do," he said. "I believe we should be dealing with our own problems at home and improving our own conditions here."
Paul's base of young voters and hard-core libertarians leads some handicappers to pigeonhole him and dismiss his chances — and with some historic justification. In the 2008 New Hampshire primary, he drew less than 8 percent of the vote. But things could be significantly different this time as Paul reaches out into new corners of the electorate.
His next stop after Keene was a house party in the affluent town of Windham on the border with Massachusetts. This was no humble living-room affair. The host hired bartenders to staff not one but two built-in bars. The appetizer table offered rabbit pate.
Four years ago, Steve Airocci, who teaches social studies, voted for Obama and had no interest in Paul. Now, he's interested. He says he senses the established order has driven the country down to rock bottom.

"There's nowhere else to go," he said. "We have to do something drastic. We have to make some significant changes in government and primarily on the financial side."

Airocci is a registered independent, a fertile group for Paul in the past. This year, though, some registered Republicans are also giving Paul a closer look. Many voters who like Paul say they believe he is the only candidate who truly means what he says.
Former state Republican Party Chairman Fergus Cullen says another reason voters might have good feelings about Paul is the way he has side-stepped the normal campaign rough and tumble.

"He's unlikely to get attacked by the other opponents because no one sees it in their interest to go after him," he said. "So they're going to continue to just hear the positive and not the negative."

Cullen says events have made Paul's ideas about foreign entanglements and rethinking government more plausible. But his gut tells him most Republican primary voters are still not ready to go as far as Paul would like.
That's probably true for the race for first place. But in the race for second, Paul might be the one to watch in the home stretch.

Working Poor
11-27-2011, 09:14 AM
WOW NPR bring attention to Ron. Don't forget to read the comments.

rprprs
11-27-2011, 09:23 AM
WOW NPR bring attention to Ron. Don't forget to read the comments.
Don't just read 'em... contribute to them.

thomas-in-ky
11-27-2011, 10:16 AM
His next stop after Keene was a house party in the affluent town of Windham on the border with Massachusetts.

Decent article! But Windham is not on the border with Massachusetts. ;)

walt
11-27-2011, 10:28 AM
Very nice!

Good job Collins?

acptulsa
11-27-2011, 10:51 AM
I do like the positive tone, but can't help but notice that it reinforces every stereotype about him from top to bottom.

76 years old in the second sentence, and nary a word about him being sharper than Perry, maintaining a gruelling schedule or bicycling. '...at odds with his rivals.' '...could surprise people', as if he has no right to be considered legitimate, and that the 'can't win' crap is anything but manufactured. '..committed young following' is nice to hear, but being 48 years old and having studied the latest polling by demographics, I don't believe it. '...signature call to return the dollar to the gold standard' is the MSM's signature misrepresentation of him, not his own signature. Now, I can plead guilty to the 'hard core' in, 'Paul's base of young voters and hard-core libertarians leads some handicappers to pigeonhole him and dismiss his chances — and with some historic justification.' But, you know, this describes the eight percent from four years ago, and ignores the makeup of the new supporters which they admit have swelled his numbers--new support that seldom fits that same demographic (how many of us long-time, hard-core libertarians do they think there are in the world, and how do you increase the numbers of long-term anything in four years?). The Windham stop may not have been on the border, but it wasn't in a typical Paul supporter's living room either--is this intended to suggest that the elite, as a rule, support the man? Because they don't. And as for Fergus Cullen saying that he sidestepped the rough and tumble by not being in first place, that's laughable. He has had plenty of hardball thrown at him--it just doesn't stick because the man has more integrity than the rest of the field put together. This is not mentioned.

'...the race for second...' Humpf. Sweet tone, deplorable content. Just what I'd have expected from a media establishment which we have chastened and whose reputation they have put in jeopardy, but which still understands its duty to minimize and marginalize our man.

sailingaway
11-27-2011, 12:06 PM
you beat me to it --- I'll delete mine!