Sen. Rand Paul is encouraging the tea party to be nicer to the president.
On the five-year anniversary of the movement, he pressed the party to move away from distracting, offensive rhetoric. It’s the latest shift by Paul toward the middle as he contemplates a run for president in 2016.
“There are times, and I don’t think it is our movement, but there are times when people are using language that shouldn’t be used,” Paul said at a tea party event on Thursday. “I recently criticized someone for using that language, and I’m not going to bring it up,” he continued, alluding to Ted Nugent, who Paul criticized for calling the president a “subhuman mongrel.”
“I will say that we can disagree with the president without calling him names,” Paul said, adding that he wanted the tea party to appeal to more people.
Paul also called on the tea party to adopt a more positive tone.
“When we present our message, if we want a bigger crowd and we want to win politically, our message has to be a happy message, one of optimism, one of inclusiveness, one of growth. A message that actually brings up the people who are poor among us, brings up those who are longterm unemployed and finds them jobs. Our message is that, but we have to figure out a way to make sure everybody knows that that’s what we’re here for.”
“Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scaroborough agreed. “Rand Paul is singing my song! I love what he’s saying,” he said Friday.
It comes at an odd time, as Paul is under fire for dredging up the Monica Lewinsky scandal and throwing it at the former First Lady and Secretary of State—and possible 2016 candidate—seemingly in hopes of discrediting her.









