Republican
presidential candidate U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (AFP Photo / Joe Raedle)
Source: Russia Today
http://rt.com/usa/news/republican-convention-ron-paul-891/
It’s not over for Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas). Not only is
the congressman still in the race for the Republican nomination for president,
but the longtime libertarian favorite is following through with his big plans
for the upcoming GOP convention.
Notwithstanding a presumptive party win for former
Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, presidential hopeful Ron Paul is still
scheduled to be in Florida for the Republican National Convention next month in
Tampa. What’s more, USA Today reports, is that the people running the RNC are
finally ready to accept Rep. Paul and his throng of supporters.
Ron Paul supporters have previously reported that the
Republican Party establishment was going out of their way to keep an event in
honor of the Texas congressman — PaulFest — from being put on during the same
weekend of the RNC.
“They’ve been fighting us all along,” PaulFest
organizer Deborah Robinet told The Tampa Bay Times last month. “We’re
Republicans. Do they want to alienate us, or do they want to bring us into the
fold?”
After failing to win enough delegates during the recent
Nebraska State Convention, the GOP was expected to exclude Rep. Paul from
speaking at this year’s RNC. When the congressman was kept out of the 2008
event, a counter protest was staged outside. This time around Rep. Paul has
remained in the race longer than all other Republican Party candidates, except
Mitt Romney, and his campaign and crew of supporters insist on having him
represented. Only now, however, do organizers with the Ron Paul campaign say
that the RNC are dropping their fight and finally accepting the rest of the
party as their own.
"They've just treated us like a friend and like a
coalition," Jesse Benton, a spokesman for the Paul campaign, tells
USA Today. "They have been honest brokers in working with us and
treated us with respect."
Even if the congressman can’t get a full time slot to
speak at the RNC, the GOP is giving him access to the University of South
Florida’s Sun Dome, a decision that both sides say they were able to agree on
mutually.
"We have worked closely with Congressman Paul to
secure a location for this event," Kyle Downey, a spokesman
for the GOP convention, adds to USA Today. Only one month earlier, RNC
spokesman James Davis told the Associated Press that the GOP had received the
Paul campaign’s request for a venue but was “making those assignments on a
rolling basis." At the time, the Paul campaign complained that delays
on part of the RNC put PaulFest in jeopardy.
"Our success brings us some clout," Jesse Benton says of
the campaign’s victory.
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