Rand Paul this week announced a class action lawsuit against President Obama to curb the NSA’s ability to gather domestic phone records, insisting such surveillance efforts should be “specific to the person, to the place and to the items.” But lurking behind the policy argument is a clear political motive as well: the Kentucky senator, who’s considering a bid for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016, has argued for years that his libertarianism is just what the party needs to attract a younger, more diverse base.
Paul’s lawsuit, which is backed by former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and tea party group Freedomworks, is the latest phase in Paul’s long running campaign against government spying.
But lately his political motives have been more visibily attached to the war on surveillance.
Paul’s asking Americans to show their support for his lawsuit by giving him their e-mail addresses and zip codes – information that some commentators noted is more valuable to a candidate building a voter database than to a judge considering a lawsuit.
Paul’s critique of the NSA isn’t unique to the right: many progressive activists are similarly appalled by evidence of widespread government spying. And opposition to such surveillance programs isn’t the only area where Paul has some overlap with the left. Some of his more libertarian positions, like scaling back the war on drugs and restricting drone strikes, also cross party lines. One of Paul’s top allies in the Senate when it comes to spying concerns is Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who is also intensely critical of the NSA.
Paul has argued such crossover issues will attract voters not traditionally associated with the GOP. He’s made an effort to reach out to African Americans by criticizing mandatory sentencing laws. And he insists protesting government intrusion will win back the so-called Millennial voters — young people born after 1980 who backed Obama by large margins in 2012.
Young voters “don’t really care as much about taxes, regulation, balanced budgets might not be their big deal either, but they care about their liberty, they care about their privacy,” Paul said at a forum hosted by Young Americans For Liberty in July. “I think if we do, the youth will come.”
Paul’s efforts may even resonate with more traditional GOP base voters. Republican strategist Ford O’Connell told msnbc that Paul’s NSA attack would appeal to that group because it dovetails with conservatives’ general anxieties about government overreach under Obama.
“This is about not just getting to the general election and winning young voters, it’s also high on the mind of tea party folks and constitutional conservatives,” O’Connell said.
For now, neither party has a monopoly on the battle over civil liberties. Many Republican leaders, who gleefully attacked Democrats for opposing warrantless wiretapping under President Bush, are still uncomfortable with Paul’s positions. And Democrats have yet to reach a consensus either, with some more hawkish officials like Senator Dianne Feinstein aggressively defending the NSA’s surveillance practices.
Some progressives are making a parallel case to Paul’s as well, arguing Democrats shouldn’t cede political ground to the GOP on the issue of privacy.
Shenna Bellows, a Democrat challenging Republican Sen. Susan Collins in Maine, has made the incumbent’s support for the NSA and the PATRIOT Act her top campaign issue.









