Ron Paul’s third campaign for president may not lead to the Texas Congressman being nominated at the Republican Convention in Tampa this August -- notwithstanding a lawsuit filed by supporters in attempt to make that happen -- but, from Maine to Alaska, the “Paul Revolution” has swept state Republican parties.
Out of the national spotlight, Paul activists have mastered obscure local party rules to win key positions of power at state conventions, infiltrating the Republican establishment across the country, including in the key swing states of Iowa and Nevada.
In Massachusetts, they even beat out many prominent pro-Mitt Romney supporters to win spots as Romney delegates. They are informally bound by party rules to vote for Romney still, but the open secret in both parties, is no one is really bound – one of the issues at the heart of the Paul supporters’ lawsuit against the national party.

Ben Margot / AP
Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, cheer as Paul speaks at the University of California at Berkeley, Calif.
Paul’s strategy has always been to motivate “the remnant” to gain influence by getting involved in party politics, and described how that would happen to a small group of reporters in Columbia, S.C., in mid-January.
“We don't win over the insiders by becoming like an insider,” Paul said. “We win the inside over by making the outsiders become more appropriate.”
But what Paul activists have done in many places is learn the rules of the insiders and use them against them.
After being described as “an outlier for the Republican Party,” Paul Wednesday morning on MSNBC, explained how supporters will achieve his long-term goal of bringing the GOP around to accepting his political philosophy.
“I want to work on the platform,” Paul said, “but we know platforms don't change people's attitudes. That's what we want to do -- get attention to changing the attitude, so that we, who are perceived as outliers, become the insiders. And that's what's happening. … We're winning state delegations, state chairmen and small offices, anywhere from city councils to county commissioners.”
Paul supporters are winning elections and becoming party insiders: chairmen, national committeemen, executive board members, elected officials, candidates and delegates.
- In Iowa, four of Paul’s former aides hold leadership positions at the state party, including chairman A.J. Spiker – who was Paul’s state co-chair. At least six members of the Iowa State Central Committee are Paul supporters.
- In Alaska, Republicans voted Russ Millette as the party’s new chairman and Debra Holle Brown as co-chair, both Paul supporters. Local reports call this a sea change in state politics, after “at least 12 years of the Alaska GOP being run by what those party newcomers call ‘establishment Republicans.’”
- In Nevada, Paul supporters won 13 of 14 new elected executive board spots at the Clark County GOP. Four years after having the lights turned out on them at the state convention in 2008, Paul supporters now hold positions at local and county GOP offices across the Silver State.
- In Minnesota, the state Republican Party endorsed Paul supporter and economics teacher Kurt Bills for the GOP Senate nomination. He will face incumbent Democrat Amy Klobuchar in November.
- And in Maine, 21-year-old Paul supporter Ashley Ryan was elected as the state’s new Republican national committeewoman. The Paul campaign claims she is likely the youngest national committeewoman.
“Look at the next generation,” Paul said on MSNBC. “I mean, there is so much excitement out there. The big deal is that the next generation are sick and tired of what they're getting and they're looking for something. And what we're offering seems to appeal to the young people.”
Paul also explained that the goal of his movement “is to show that there's a political benefit toward accepting some of the views that we have.”
“I believe we're actually doing a favor for the Republican Party. If they would look to us for guidance and to realize that if they would accept some of these things, they might have an easier time winning.”
That said, not everyone's sold on just how lasting the impact of the "revolution" will be, considering Paul wasn't able to win a state in the GOP primary and didn't stop Romney, the most establishment of all the candidates, from becoming the nominee.
Asked which mattered more -- influence over party platform or being a state party chairman, Steve Schmidt, John McCain's 2008 campaign manager, dismissed either and said Paul supporters would be little more than a "hassle we'll have to deal with."
"I'm not sure that either have a particularly big influence on the direction of the party," Schmidt said on MSNBC. "When you have a state chairman who takes over a state party and the state party's dysfunctional, it's no longer relevant to the political goals of electing a majority, whether that's on the Democratic side or Republican side. Typically you see something that is taking place in California, for example, where you know the Republican parties become a small ideological clubhouse, totally faded to irrelevance where they-- factions gather twice every year to pass resolutions, denouncing the other faction, and it's a small clubhouse where people are relevant in the sphere of that small clubhouse, but no longer relevant in terms of being able to shape the outcome of an election -- to recruit candidates, to raise money, to register voters. And that's the direction these dysfunctional parties will go."
Jeff Johnson, a Republican National Committeeman from Minnesota, though, addressed the anxiety some in the establishment have over this increased participation by Paul’s followers.
“Ron Paul haters, get over it,” Johnson said. “If we don’t grow, we die as a party.”
Nearing the end of his career, Paul, 76, calls his movement an “ideological revolution,” one he says is “alive and well.”
And this year, as Paul disciples become more involved and win elections, it’s a movement the Republican Party is being forced to deal with.


go Ron Paul the only veteran among all the candidates!
We all know the old man is paving the way for his son at this point. The GOP cannot go his way-they are at a tipping point where if they go any further to the right, they will become completely marginalised. Either a third middle party will spring up, or the Dems will own the system until the GOP moves back to the middle.
The country does not want the conservative agenda. They may not be happy with what they have, but the bounce back from 4 years of a win in November would be even worse than 2006 and 2008 for the GOP.
I don't think the country is ready to go back to the GOP way of doing things, and not x2.
If people vote in Nov, it won't go well for the GOP.
Ron Paul has my vote, & thats all I need to say!
stopthis - Veteran of what - he was a doctor - even he admits he never saw action - if you were so hot on Veterans take a look at all of the Democrats - versus - the Republicans
But I guess your just afraid to see the truth!
Go Ron Paul, people don't understand . When someone believes in something with all there heart. People will stick there will forever. Also, obama is worst then Ronmeny. But, I hope sense that Ron Paul and Ronmeny are friends, just maybe some influence. Ron Paul 2012....Boxer dont quit in the 7th round. One punch can't change whole outcome.....all the way to tampa....Go hard Ron Paul supporters!!!!
Ron Paul 2012....
Paul would get my vote if I switched it to republican which won't happen unless Obama really messes up or does something illegal before the election. I would never vote for Romney. Paul wants to legalize marijuana use and he is an MD so he knows the dangers. He has taken an oath to "do no harm" in his medical career and I assume he would abide by that if he ran the country, meaning he would not let people suffer if they were willing to work no matter how bad the job market gets. If he is true to his medical profession he would be humane, that is much more than what I could say about trust in Mitt. So Paul, I hope you do start a movement that either gets a 3rd party in this country or gets rid of the far right influence in the republican party.
There may yet be some hope for the GOP, although it's still an uphill fight against those who are in charge and have been seeking to destroy it for years.
Ron Paul scares those who think Liberty is overated and wish to suck the teet of the Nanny State for all it's worth
What Ron Paul supporters don't understand is that anarchy isn't liberty. "I want to do whatever I want" isn't liberty in organized society.
It takes laws and regulations in order for us to be free as a society.
Bear, it's not about "getting to do whatever we want" it's about limiting Federal government to only doing what it's SUPPOSED to be doing, everything else should be left up to the states. Please explain to me anywhere that Dr. Paul has said we should have anarchy?
It's too bad RP doesn't have a chance vs. Mitt. I'd actually consider RP. Mitt is a waste of a presidential Candidate IMO.
I am laughing at the Libs on here :-)
They are so desparate,, they really can't talk about Obama because he turns most people off and has failed completely.
I am a Tea Party guy and I welcome Ron Paul and all his supporters to the Republican Convention enthusiastically... we will need some people there with some real issues so the Dems in Disguise,, ( Public Sector Dems trying to cause trouble ) stay out of the way .
I am really tired of the " two losers like Obama and Romney junk " .
Romney has an outstanding record in business, and got elected and did a good job in a Liberal Stronghold like Massachusetts... you Libs need to go vote for Obama and not worry about the Right,, we are gonna repeat Nov. 2010 much to you future disgust.
Why would anyone vote for Obama.. a Rank Amateur ?
Why would anyone think we are better off with Obama ? He has no plans at all . He has done nothing but campaign since last fall ? At least he got a huge chunk of money from Bain Capital ,, you remember those evil Private Equity folks ?
Jobs are in the toilet, Housing is in the toilet , Europe is going to drag us down , we still buy oil from OPEC when we have no reason to at all,,, the Fed has protected Obama and the Media has protected Obama ,, but you cannot hide the truth from intelligent people ( like me :-)
Obama has failed . Obama has spit on American Business which drives the economy,,, he's still stuck on blaming Bush though he has now been in charge for almost 4 years ,, yawn yawn,,, he violates the Constitution on a regular basis ,,, he nas NO PLAN,,, he has no more Hope and Change,, the Change took us into bankruptcy..
Dream on Liberals,, Obama has Zero Chance !
Libs will counter that you want to go back to what got us in trouble in the first place. The problem with that argument, is the past troubles are due to more government overreach, not less. Bush was a big government guy. I pray Romney lives up to his free market rhetoric. We all know what Obama stands for: a LOT more of same -- tax, spend and expand government (aka: the European model).
The core beliefs of Ron Paul are ones I believe could turn this country around from the wrong direction it is taking. His political ideology is far above what we presently follow and I would have given him my vote in November.
What has kept him from nomination is mostly the corrupt rut this country follows and enjoys, it's much worse than an addiction to heroin.
Paul has some very good ideas that don't exactly jive with the way the old bulls in the me, me, me, Rep party don't like because they mean dealing fairly and honestly with problems instead of paying off people, passing unfair legislation that benefits the Rep puke pit party only, and all of their corrupt wall street crooked friends, big bank crooked friends and the big business mafia in this country.
The putrid Rep party is on its way out just as soon as these old corrupt bull Rep pukes die off, then it will finally change.