Ron Paul slams Patriot Act, backers drown out jeers at conference
Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) elicited the loudest reaction of any speaker
so far at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, with
a throng of raucous supporters drowning out audible boos emanating
from the CPAC crowd.
Paul didn’t disappoint, offering a fiery speech that took on the
Patriot Act and military spending and lamented bipartisanship in
Washington.
{mosads}The Texas Republican, who said earlier in the week that he’s
“seriously considering” another run for the White House next year,
cheered the failure of a House vote that would have extended several
provisions of the Patriot Act, calling the measure “the destruction of
the 4th Amendment.”
“We want to protect our civil liberties as well as our economic
liberties,” said Paul.
Referencing Egypt, he rejected the notion of foreign aid, arguing that
protesters in Cairo are upset with the U.S. for spending some $70
billion to prop up “that puppet dictator for all these years.”
“We need to do a lot less, a lot sooner,” Paul said of foreign
affairs. “Not only in Egypt, but around the world.”
“I’m sure half of the people in this room wouldn’t cut one penny from
military spending,” said Paul, arguing that “military spending is not
defense.”
Paul also lamented bipartisanship in Washington, telling the crowd,
“We’ve had way too much bipartisanship for about 60 years … It’s the
bipartisanship of the welfare system, the warfare system, the monetary
system.”
Meanwhile, Paul backers are everywhere at CPAC, organizing straw-poll
support, blanketing attendees with pro-Paul literature and making
plenty of noise in the main ballroom.
Paul was the surprise winner of last year’s straw poll, and most
attendees at this year’s event fully expect a repeat performance when
the results are announced Saturday.
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