About a month ago, we learned that Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) had hired Jack Hunter — also known as the “Southern Avenger” — to work in his Senate office, despite Hunter’s past as a neo-Confederate, pro-secessionist activist. Indeed, the staffer, who helped write Rand Paul’s book, used to make public appearances in a Confederate flag wrestling mask and has boasted that he raises “a personal toast every May 10 to celebrate John Wilkes Booth’s birthday.”
After Paul acknowledged having mixed feelings about Abraham Lincoln, the senator defended Hunter, saying he was just “a youth” when he wrote ridiculous things. (Hunter was 35 when he was still defending the Confederacy in print columns.) Eventually, Paul accepted Hunter’s resignation.
And now he really doesn’t want to talk about it.
Paul appeared on NPR’s “On Point” yesterday, interviewed by CNBC’s John Harwood, and got quite unusually testy when asked about his former aide and co-author, telling Harwood the host didn’t want “an intelligent discussion.”








