Montana's Primary

For Ron Paul Supporters: A Bitter End


By Robert Struckman, 6-03-08

 
 

In a corner of an upstairs room at the Iron Horse bar and grill in downtown Missoula, Ron Paul supporters vented their frustration.

“His values are more in sync with Montana than any other candidate,” said Ty Marbut emphatically. “But more than any other issue, it’s economic for me.”

He wasn’t talking about his own pocketbook but U.S. monetary policy. The Federal Reserve Bank is foreign-owned, chimed in his friend Tim Bernard. “It’s legalized counterfeiting,” Bernard added with disgust.

All this came on a night that some hoped would give a symbolic victory to Paul, a tenacious underdog opponent to presumptive Republican nominee John McCain. After all, Paul took second to Mitt Romney in Montana’s Republican caucus in February. Paul handily won some Montana’s counties, including Missoula and Flathead.

Plus, Paul supporters have been organized and enthusiastic. Ron Paul yard signs grossly outnumber McCain’s. In Republican circles, Paul’s supporters have been compared—because of their newness to the political process and their passion—to Barack Obama’s.

All this has Republican insiders happy. Montana Republican head Jake Eaton said, “It’s exciting to see, from a political perspective, the organization. They’re very fervent in their support, and they’re proud of it. It’s energizing the party. I’m glad we have this opportunity to have that internal debate. The key is to keep it civil. Competition makes everybody stronger.”

About Paul’s supporters, Will Deschamps in Missoula said, “Stay engaged. We need you. But you can’t change the Party from the outside. You’ve gotta be inside.” His precinct-level view seems to indicate that quite a few of Paul’s volunteers and supporters will remain active Republicans.

For some of the newcomers, though, the outside feels more right. David Hart is a 48-year-old political novice who put aside his career in real estate investing to lead the Ron Paul campaign in Montana. It wasn’t easy. “We had a steep learning curve,” Hart said. “I’ve never felt there was a candidate worth giving my support. Ron Paul is impeccable. He never wavers. He gets criticized for that, but a lot of us don’t believe we should compromise at all on our principles.”

Early Tuesday evening, as the primary vote came in, Hart was sanguine. “Win or lose it’s the same result. For him to receive the nomination is not in the cards,” he said. “It’s been a lot of fun to shine the light on and expose the lack of principle of the Republican old guard, the ones who are more concerned with the Party than the principals.”

Ellen Finnigan, who organized Missoula for Ron Paul meet up group, harbored some bitterness about the way the Republican nomination played out. “It doesn’t matter. The Republican Party has gone to great lengths to ostracize him. I’m not exactly pumped.”

Finnigan said she didn’t plan to gather with fellow Paul supporters to watch the vote come in. She just wasn’t interested. She recently graduated with a master’s degree in fine arts from UM. The process involved a nonfiction thesis; a lot of work, she said.

“You may want to mention that Ron Paul came in second in Montana in February. He beat McCain. This is completely divorced from the 25 national delegates. The Republican Party took the power out of the hands of people and into the hands of the Party elite,” Finnigan said. “This has been a long election season.”

Back at the Iron Horse, the faithful had thinned out a bit. There was just a few Ron Paul supporters with leftover CDs with conspiracy theories on things like the Federal Reserve Bank and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. As the final ballots were tallied, Paul had only about 19 percent of the vote.

Correction: A previous version of this story misspelled Ellen Finnigan’s name in one instance and misidentified the group she organized. Also, David Hart’s age was incorrect. We apologize for the errors.



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