Rand Paul says he wants to grow the Republican Party. His real challenge is bringing the rest of the party along.
“We have to have a bigger party, a more inclusive party, and when we do we’re going to be the dominant party again, but if we do the same thing we’ve always done, and say hey, we’re going after the same people, we’re going to get the same result and that’s not been good for us in presidential elections,” the Kentucky senator told Fox News on Friday, before he was set to speak to the Republican National Committee and meet with the Coalition of African American Pastors. “We’ve tried 50 years of the Democrats passing out money and it hasn’t worked.”
Although he’s stumbled at times, as with a condescending 2012 speech at Howard University and his hiring of an aide with Neo-Confederate sympathies, Paul has admirably continued to make a pitch for his party to nonwhite voters. He’s spoken eloquently about the disproportionate impact of the drug war and felony disenfranchisement laws on minorities, and even flirted with telling fellow Republicans to call off the war on voting. On those matters, Paul comes across as sincere and compassionate.
Those issues have the potential to resonate because disenfranchisement and the criminal justice system have historically been among the preferred tools of state-backed racism. In the aftermath of Reconstruction, southern states used selectively enforced felonies to institute a system of near-slavery. Across the country, felony disenfranchisement laws were passed in order to limit the political power of black voters.
Paul is clearly aware of this history — he’s told audiences to read Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow, which outlines the historical links between the segregation and mass incarceration.
In an interview with The New York Times Friday, Paul spoke out against the Republican Party’s push for restrictive voter ID laws. ““Everybody’s gone completely crazy on this voter ID thing,” he told the Times’ Jeremy Peters. “I think it’s wrong for Republicans to go too crazy on this issue because it’s offending people.”
Some might argue Paul is an imperfect messenger. Paul’s rapid political rise owes a great deal to his father Ron Paul’s following, but the elder Paul lost any appeal he might have had to minority voters with his racist associations. Senator Paul has also unconvincingly walked back his opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which barred discrimination on the basis of race in businesses of public accommodation.
Yet it’s not Senator Paul’s associations with the “Southern Avenger” or his father that pose the greatest obstacle to his outreach efforts. It’s his association with the Republican Party.









