Former Rep. Ron Paul became the latest high-profile Republican to stump for trailing gubernatorial hopeful Ken Cuccinelli, echoing the Virginia state attorney general’s anti-Obamacare campaign messaging by suggesting that some states may want to consider nullification.
“I’ve been working on the assumption that nullification is going to come. It’s going to be a de facto nullification if it’s not legalized. Because pretty soon things are going to get so bad that we’re just going to ignore the feds and live our own lives in our own states,” Paul said Monday to cheers from the election-eve campaign rally crowd in Richmond.
“Why should we grant this authority to a few thugs who want to take over the government to make all our decisions for us?” he added later.
Paul pegged his “nullification” talk to the famous Virginian who’s credited with coining the concept: Thomas Jefferson. But the term has a particular controversial history in the South, having been used by segregationists rejecting federally mandated desegregation during the civil rights movement.
The term was so fraught with meaning that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. felt the need to bring it up during his famous “I have a dream…” speech.
“I have a dream that one day, down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of ‘interposition’ and ‘nullification’ — one day right there in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers,” he said in 1963.
Paul may be one of the most prominent politicians to consider the nullification track, but he’s certainly not the first. A group of South Carolina Republicans have proposed a bill to make it illegal to enforce parts of the Affordable Care Act in their state.









