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Ron Paul sticks with strategy of ignoring delegate-rich prizes in favor of caucus states

By Maria L. La Ganga, Los Angeles Times –

PAHRUMP, Nev. — Ron Paul is warming up the crowd as he heads into what could be the most important stretch of his political life.

The audience is raucous, packing heat and aching to cheer, when he zeroes in on the year he says America went down the tubes. It is the centerpiece of his run for the White House, a sure-fire Ron Paul crowd pleaser.

He rails against 1913, when the federal income tax and the Federal Reserve were born, ushering in what he derides as “the age of big government.” The crowd here goes crazy.

This is the mystery of Ron Paul, or one of them, anyway: how a 76-year-old Texas congressman who bears a slight resemblance to Mr. Magoo and sounds like he’s running against Woodrow Wilson can draw some of the biggest, youngest and most ardent crowds of campaign 2012 — supporters who are unwavering and largely non-transferrable.

The other Republican contenders are “trying to out-right wing each other and out-Christian each other, and then you have Ron Paul,” marveled John Straayer, professor of political science at Colorado State University. “He doesn’t talk about that. It’s liberty, liberty, liberty. That rings a bell with these kids” along with many others.

And, perhaps, the bigger mystery? How a strategy that ignores delegate-rich prizes (think Florida) in favor of caucus states (Nevada, last Saturday; Colorado and Minnesota Tuesday; Maine, ending Saturday) could possibly garner Paul the Republican nomination for president. So far, second place is his best showing, although he has more delegates than Rick Santorum. Not that that’s saying much.

The question dogs him at every turn — a Las Vegas Strip news conference on the battered economy three hopeful days before Nevada’s voting, in broadcast interviews Saturday and Sunday as he lost big in the Silver State. Sometimes the queries are delicate, other times, not so much.

“At some point don’t you have to win a contest?” he was asked on his 55th wedding anniversary, before presenting his wife, Carol, a bouquet of red and peach-colored roses during a news conference where supporters outnumbered reporters 20-1. The flowers got a standing ovation. The question did not.

Paul finished third in Nevada, just behind former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, but seriously lagging winner Mitt Romney, the erstwhile governor of Massachusetts. Although he won the youth vote here — just as he did in Iowa and New Hampshire — it marks a serious disappointment for the former Air Force flight surgeon, who is counting on a sprawling grassroots network in states that hold party caucuses instead of primaries.

In 2008, he came in second behind Romney in Nevada — albeit a very distant second.

“The votes aren’t all counted yet, and there seems to be a bit of chaos out there, even though it was a small caucus vote,” Paul told George Stephanopoulos Sunday morning on ABC’s “This Week.” “There was a lot of confusion. So yes, if you go from second to third, there would be disappointment, but also on the positive side, we will get a bloc of votes. We will still get some delegates.”

Paul stopped short of saying that he had no hope of capturing the nomination. But for the first time in the 2012 campaign, the inveterate optimist was sounding shaky.

“The first thing you want to achieve is get as many votes as you can and get as many delegates and set your target high,” he said. “And, of course, you set it for victory. But you have to live within the real world.”

So far, though, Paul has managed to operate outside of everyday political physics. He is long-winded, fond of 135-word sentences with a heavy emphasis on Austrian economics. He is blunt, telling a young questioner at a Hispanics in Politics meeting that he flat-out cannot support proposed legislation that would give minors who were brought to this country illegally a path to citizenship.

“I can’t endorse the DREAM Act, because there’s a lot of money involved,” Paul said, although he also described a more nuanced position on immigration than his competitors.

“As one who believes in individual liberty and American spirit and the American dream, the one thing that I have resisted and condemned as not the American way (is) I just do not believe that barbed wire fences and guns on our border will solve any of our problems,” he told the Las Vegas Latino group to loud applause. “I think we need more resources to handle our immigration services because they’re lousy.”

The Constitution-loving Paul also opposes domestic combat, railing regularly about the waste and injustice of the war on drugs. It’s a message that particularly appeals to Kevin Foxcroft, a medical marijuana user from Sparks.

“What I do personally, the government should not know,” Foxcroft, 21, said after a raucous rally in Reno.

Foxcroft caucused for Paul on Saturday, but he had to admit that his attention wandered a bit during the libertarian’s 40-minute Reno speech. Because front and center in the big ballroom were Dennis Hof, owner of the Moonlite BunnyRanch, and celebrated Bunny Cami Parker.

Halfway through Paul’s pre-caucus stemwinder, Parker pulled out her smartphone and knelt in front of the stage to shoot video of her favorite candidate — no mean feat in platform stilettos and a form-fitting, hot pink mini-dress.

“I was sitting two rows back,” Foxcroft said, “and my eyes were 51 percent on Ron Paul and 49 percent on her. Sorry, I’m a dude. And, yes, I have visited the brothel a couple of times. You gotta support the local economy.”

And as for Parker, 25, who is drawn to Paul for his belief in state’s rights and individual rights?

“I was very, very impressed,” she said, as a crowd gathered for pictures — with her, not the candidate. “Even more so than I was before. Honestly? I have a little crush.”

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