You haven’t really seen Rand Paul speak until you’ve seen Rand Paul speak to libertarians. The Kentucky Republican senator comes alive in front of a like-minded audience, cracking jokes, jumping freely across his favorite topics and soaking up applause at every turn.
Paul’s speech at the Liberty Political Action Conference, a gathering of activists aligned with his father Ron Paul’s liberty movement, was no exception, opening with a freewheeling ode to Constitution Week.
“Barack Obama celebrated by doing one more unconstitutional thing: He started an unconstitutional war this week,” he said. “That’s not an unusual week for him.”
On civil rights, he went over some of his recent passion projects, including restoring voting rights for felons and confronting police brutality.
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“Was anybody else bothered by the sight of mine-resistant vehicles and guns pointed at unarmed men in Ferguson?” he asked, referring to the sometimes violent confrontations between police and protestors in a St. Louis suburb last month following a local police officer’s shooting death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown.
Paul ended with a phrase that sounded right at home on a presidential bumper sticker: “Freedom is popular. Bring it on.”
Paul was undeniably the man of the hour, but there was also a tension in the air among the true believers at LPAC. On the one hand he’s almost certainly the movement’s best chance to put one of its own into the White House in 2016, especially given what looks to be a wide open Republican field with no clear frontrunner. On the other hand, the principled activists who powered his father Ron Paul’s overachieving 2008 and 2012 campaigns are nervous about what parts of their platform the younger Paul might need to leave behind in the process.
“I like Rand, my hesitation is that I want to see what he stands for,” Linc Austin, who traveled from Nashville, told msnbc. “It might be the only way you can do it. He won’t win by sticking with the Ron Paul platform all the way. The question is where are the compromises.”
Paul has never fully embraced his father’s policy platform, opting for a slightly more hawkish brand of foreign policy and distancing himself from some of the more fringe figures that the elder Paul, a former Texas congressman, is comfortable associating himself with. In recent days, Rand Paul took perhaps his boldest leap yet, overcoming his skepticism of military engagement in the Middle East to back an air campaign aimed at destroying the Islamic State.
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Libertarian activists, however, are often characterized by an extreme reluctance to get entangled in conflicts abroad. The elder Paul, who shared the stage with his son on Thursday, has warned that entering the fray against ISIS “will just hurt us and it will end when we go bankrupt.” Kentucky Republican Rep. Thomas Massie, another libertarian hero who spoke at LPAC, has also criticized the airstrikes.
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Bryan Simonson, a data analyst from Seattle, told msnbc before the speeches began that he preferred the U.S. “stayed out of foreign policy messes,” but he was willing to tolerate some straying from Paul.









