by Thomas R. Eddlem
thenewamerican.com
Sunday, 17 June 2012
Texas Republican Congressman Ron Paul emerged from the Iowa state
convention with a clear majority of the delegates being sent by the
state to the GOP national convention in Tampa in August. Paul won 21 of the 25 contestable delegates, and will have 23 of the 28 total delegates Iowa will send to Tampa.
The Iowa victory marks the third and final time Iowa has had a
“winner” of its first-in-the-nation caucus. Mitt Romney had narrowly
“won” the January caucus in a first, unofficial count. But that victory
was reversed on a recount later that month that gave Rick Santorum the victory
by a razor-thin margin of 34 votes. Paul had placed a close third in
the caucus vote tallies, but the delegates to the national convention
are selected by a state convention and are not bound to the results of
the caucus poll. Paul forces continued to organize in the county and state caucuses that followed, and pulled off an overwhelming victory with the June 15-16 state caucus.
“This ends a process that began with the Iowa Cavalcade last summer,” Paul campaign aide Doug Wead boasted
on his blog, “when Ron Paul came within a few votes of winning the
Straw Vote, and handily defeated Romney, Santorum, Perry, Gingrich and
Pawlenty. Dr. Paul’s strong showing was virtually ignored by the main
stream media whose executives apparently felt threatened by his call for
transparency in the actions of the Federal Reserve, a prime support
system for their corporate advertisers and, in some cases, their own
parent holding companies.”
Mainstream media websites have continued to project Ron Paul as
winning only one delegate in Iowa, and it has become the source of
amusement to Paul forces. Wead sarcastically called it a “marvelous
fiction” that the New York Times and the Associated Press are still claiming in on-line charts that Ron Paul had won only a single delegate to the national convention from Iowa. The New York Times is also claiming that Paul won no delegates from Louisiana, though Paul won a majority of delegates from the Pelican State.
The Los Angeles Times noted
of the Paul campaign, “By working arcane electoral rules and getting
supporters into positions of power in local, county and state party
operations, the strategy is paying dividends across the nation.” Despite
losing the popular vote in every state (winning the popular vote only
the Virgin Islands caucus), Paul forces have pulled away with a majority
of delegates in many states. Paul forces have organized to take over a
number of state Republican parties and were even able to win a large
number of delegates from Romney's home state of Massachusetts (though
these Massachusetts delegates will be nominally pledged to vote for
Romney). (CONTINUE READING)