I held the door for Ron Paul today.
First let me set the stage.
I was eating lunch in the student union building (or Husky Union Building) at the University of Washington on Thursday morning when a friend asked me if I knew if Ron Paul was coming to town.
When I said "no," and asked where, exactly, the congressman was going to show up, I was informed that he’d be coming to the HUB.
I thought my friend was joking, but he insisted that he was quite serious. The lanky Texas congressman was scheduled to make a slightly last-minute detour from a Seattle campaign stop to open his Washington campaign office nearby and then stump on campus at 2 p.m.
It wasn’t long after that that I got some independent confirmation. As I finished my lunch, I noticed that a steady stream of Ron Paul supporters had begun infiltrating the building. Many wore white buttons proclaiming "Ron Paul for president" or were carrying red, white and blue signs emblazoned with campaign slogans. In other words, they weren’t hard to spot.
A big crowd soon assembled, "flash-mob" style, on the steps of the HUB’s front entrance. It was a windy, partially clear day, and the group’s energy was palpable.
I had heard from some Paul fans earlier that the congressman was supposed to enter through a side door, and so when I heard a cry that "he’s coming in the back!" I dashed inside and made my way to where I was sitting earlier.
And there he was, making his way through the noisy lunchroom crowd. Surrounded by media folks and fans (well, mostly fans), he passed through the assembled throng, doing the traditional political meet-and-greet. He looked tired, and hunched a bit as people grabbed him to get their photos taken. The 72-year-old man’s fatigue was understandable, especially considering that he had just arrived from last night’s GOP debate in Los Angeles.
But by the time he got to the HUB’s entrance and clambered shakily onto the steps, his supporters were jazzed. Chants of "Ron Paul, Ron Paul" echoed across the HUB lawn as began his characteristic stump speech, emphasizing the need to return to a strict interpretation of the U.S. Constitution and libertarian ideals.
"It’s not a radical departure, it’s just a restoration … our revolution will give people more freedom, not less freedom," he intoned, in a folksy, if somewhat strained voice. It was hard to hear him, as I was standing some distance behind where he was perched somewhat haphazardly.
Confused students filed by, stopped, listened, and then hurriedly walked on, while others rushed to join the crowd, chatting excitedly on their cell phones. Ron Paul volunteers circled, distributing DVD’s and filming the scene for posterity.
After speaking for about 15 minutes, Paul stepped down and then moved slowly towards the HUB’s upper entrance doors, again surrounded by supporters.
This is where I come in. I had been standing not too far away, and decided to hold open the door, figuring he’d have to come my way eventually. He did, and walked right past me, into the foyer, and then out another side door. I did attempt to shake his hand, but the focused Paul didn’t seem to see me and kept marching right on ahead. A fellow student newspaper reporter noted that he didn’t act like your typically charismatic politician, eager to shake everything in sight.
He continued to march out to a waiting minivan, and was driven off to the sounds of additional chanting. He was apparently on his way to Spokane for more rallies.
I talked to Kyle Brotherton, Paul’s communications coordinator for Washington, about his candidate’s strategy for next weekend’s caucuses.
"We’re really excited about the caucus states," he said. The opportunity to advocate for their candidate on a personal basis is something Paul supporters are looking forward to, he said, adding that primary states tend to disenfranchise candidates who don’t receive ample media attention. To put it another way, Paul’s people want to pick up as many delegates as they can, wherever they can. Hence the visit to bolster his loyal following in Seattle.
Based on what I saw, Paul received his fair share of attention. His fans included a mix of older and younger people, but the vast majority of the rally’s attendees were college kids in their 20s.
This brings up the question: will the vaunted "youthquake" shake the political world, or is it just another fad?
Paul and Ill. Sen. Barack Obama are the two most "youth-centric" candidates, and are the two most dependent on the zeal of their young supporters. Several of the students I talked to seem convinced that the youth vote phenomenon is finally becoming a political reality.
"He knows that a lot of his base is the youth vote," said Allen Tudor-Berendzen, 21, a UW engineering student and Paul fan who’s quick to name Obama as his second pick.
"Voter apathy has been the reality in our demographic," he admitted, but "he’s trying to get the Republican Party back to its roots and reach out beyond its age bracket."
David Drehle’s piece in Time magazine this week on the potential power of the youth vote contains a nice moment of historical perspective:
"When young people get involved, they tend to stay involved. The graybeards of today's Democratic Party were once the inspired youth of the New Frontier, or Clean for Gene McCarthy, or bell-bottomed foot soldiers for George McGovern. Scan the crowd at an Obama rally, squint, and you just might see the future. For the moment, it's enough for young Obama supporters to feel that they are part of something big and historic."
While I was at a Paul event, the spirit is still the same. College students have voted before in large numbers, and they can do so again. But it’s our responsibility — if we don’t become a force in politics this election cycle, it’ll be because we didn’t follow through, and not because the candidates didn’t try hard enough.
My journalism class’ coverage of the upcoming Republican and Democratic caucuses is not only an attempt to practice our reporting skills, but also a way of bucking a 40-year trend of non-involvement in the political process.
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