Toronto Star

Paul announces run for Republican nomination

- JEREMY W. PETERS

LOUISVILLE, KY.— Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky declared himself a candidate for the Republican nomination for president Tuesday, aiming to upset the political order in Washington and disprove those in his own party who doubt that a fiercely libertaria­n conservati­ve can be a serious contender.

“I am running for president to return our country to the principles of liberty and limited government,” Paul wrote in a post on his website Tuesday.

Paul’s brand of politics could make him both an outlier and a target among his rivals. In a primary contest of candidates debating which of them is the most doctrinair­e conservati­ve, Paul is likely to be the only one arguing for reducing federal drug penalties, clamping down on the nation’s intelligen­ce agencies and taking a more deliberati­ve approach to military interventi­on.

On social issues like abortion and same-sex marriage, however, he does not stray from the Republican Party line.

Paul, 52, will become the second Republican to enter the 2016 campaign, following his colleague in the Senate, Ted Cruz of Texas.

It will not remain a small field for long.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) is expected to announce his candidacy next week. Also waiting in the wings are Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor, who are expected to declare soon, rounding out what Republican­s say is perhaps their most com- petitive and robust slate of candidates since 1980, when Ronald Reagan faced competitio­n from party heavyweigh­ts like George Bush and Howard Baker.

While Paul’s political resumé may be short — he entered politics with the emergence of the Tea Party movement, winning election to the Senate in 2010, in his first run for office — he has built over the past year and a half what Republican strategist­s say are some of the most extensive political operations in the states that will vote first in the party’s nominating process: Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.

Much of the backbone for that political operation will come from the voters and volunteers who gave his father, former Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, a base of energetic support in his own unsuccessf­ul bids for the presidency in 2008 and 2012.

But Rand Paul has made it clear in his appeals over the past two years to constituen­cies as varied as students at black colleges, tech executives, movement libertaria­ns and establishm­ent Republican­s that his intention is to seek out a far wider path to the nomination than his father did.

Among the Republican contenders, Paul will need to put together the most disparate coalition to win the nomination.

 ??  ?? Sen. Rand Paul’s brand of politics makes him an outlier and a target among his rivals.
Sen. Rand Paul’s brand of politics makes him an outlier and a target among his rivals.

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