fbpx
Breaking Campus News. Launching Media Careers.
Will Romney Choose Rand Paul?

The Daily Caller’s Matt Lewis wonders whether the other Paul might have made Mitt Romney’s VP short list:

Before it was clear Mitt Romney would be the GOP nominee, I noted that it wouldn’t be absurd to think a potential Romney-Paul deal could be in the works, making Rand Paul the running mate in exchange for helping Romney get over the 1,144 delegate hump.

Interestingly, now that Romney has reached the delegate count to avoid such a scenario — and Ron Paul has conceded he has no shot at the nomination — the idea hasn’t completely evaporated. The question remains: Might Rand be a bridge for Romney to the Tea Party that now constitutes a major part of the GOP base?

The American Conservative, a leading intellectual voice for non-interventionism, is abuzz today with chatter about Sen. Paul. Daniel McCarthy makes the case for Paul as a symbolic move for Romney, also arguing it would be a major victory for the libertarian wing of the partly. W. James Antle isn’t so optimistic, writing: “A Romney-Paul unity ticket sounds very compelling in theory. In practice, it would be unlikely to benefit either party.” And finally, Daniel Larison doubles down on Antle’s statement: “Romney isn’t going to offer Paul the VP slot, but Paul shouldn’t take it even if he did.”

I don’t think Paul should be written off so quickly, but I can understand the pessimistic tone from the TAC crew. The elements of the GOP that Rand’s father tapped into are but a small chunk of the GOP. That said, I still wouldn’t write off Rand’s chances. He’s not on my short list (that would be Sens. Rubio and Portman), but he wouldn’t be an absurd choice, either. He’s articulate, principled — and his message is an exciting one.

Rand Paul does seem like a less likely choice than Portman. But in my view, there is little reason to put Rubio ahead of Paul. Both are recently elected members of the U.S. Senate who support economic freedom and social conservatism. Both are Tea Party stalwarts. Their differences come on foreign policy: Paul is very much a believer in his father’s non-interventionist philosophy, while Rubio is a staunch neoconservative. The Republican Party base–and the country at large–probably dwell somewhere in between these two foreign policy extremes. Why then does Rubio get frontrunner VP status, but not Paul?

Like The College Fix on Facebook / Follow us on Twitter

Please join the conversation about our stories on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Reddit, MeWe, Rumble, Gab, Minds and Gettr.