Rand Paul is Running for President in 2016 - Get Ready for the MSM Smear Campaign to Ramp Up
Rand Paul announces he is running for president
"I have a message, a message that is loud and clear and does not mince words," Paul told supporters during a fiery speech at the Galt House in downtown Louisville, hours after announcing his bid for the White House on his website. "We have come to take our country back."
The tea party favorite and libertarian Republican candidate joined Texas Sen. Ted Cruz as the second major figure to launch a campaign for the GOP nomination."Too often, when Republicans have won, we have squandered our victory by becoming part of the Washington machine," Paul said. "That's not who I am."
Painting himself as a rebellious outsider and contrarian within the Republican party, Paul railed against career politicians, and suggested instituting term limits for members of Congress.
“Washington is horribly broken, I fear it cannot be fixed from within," Paul said. "I've been to Washington, and let me tell you, there is no monopoly on knowledge."Paul also touched on foreign policy, vowing to "defend America from haters of mankind."
The 52-year-old follows in the footsteps of his father, former Texas representative Ron Paul, who served nearly 40 years in the U.S. House and ran three unsuccessful bids for the presidency. The elder Paul joined his son onstage, but did not speak.
"This is the second most interesting father-son psychodrama in the presidential race," Washington Post political reporter Karen Tumulty told Yahoo News in a special live report hosted by Global News Anchor Katie Couric. "On one hand, [Rand Paul] wants to draw distinctions [with Ron Paul], but on the other hand tap into that energy his father was able to build during two presidential runs."But Paul faces an uphill battle for the GOP nomination. In the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush led all potential Republican candidates at 20 percent among likely Republican voters, with Cruz and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (12 percent) 8 points behind.
Paul stands in fourth at 9 percent.
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