13 Hours That Changed the Republican Party

By Joseph Curl Washington Times Sometimes when you least expect it Washington can be surprising. rand-paul-filibNo it wasnt a surprise last week when weather forecasters warned that a mighty blizzard would bury the nations capital under a foot of snow and then rained all day. Thats been going on since the 1970s. And it wasnt surprising that an egotistical president would suddenly invite his adversaries to dinner to chew the fat. (Funny how the chief executive will suddenly change his tune when polls show Americans hate his latest policy.) What surprised all of Washington even all of America was a first-term senator taking to the Senate floor for a filibuster: A real honest to God Mr. Smith Goes to Washington filibuster not the milquetoast threat whined by the bloviating cowards who now populate the hallowed chamber. Yes a man a real man finally walked into the well of the Senate and said Nope. No more. Not one inch more until Ive had my say. Make yourself comfortable gentlemen this is going to take a while." But this man an ophthalmologist mind you didnt just read from the phone book (as Sen. Alfonse DAmato once did). No this man took the millions watching little old C-SPAN through one of the single greatest and most profound enunciations of the U.S. Constitution and in a single stroke both slayed the staid Republican old guard in the Senate and vaulted onto the national stage. His name is Sen. Rand Paul and he spoke for nearly 13 hours. All because he wanted the answer to a single question: Can America kill an American on American soil with a drone simply drop a bomb on a citizen they deem a threat with no judge or jury or protection under the Constitution? The answer is simple and just one word: No. The Founders had seen to that (and the document they produced is flush with guarantees that such a thing could never happen not in the new country they were establishing). But President No. 44 and especially his oily attorney general have other ideas. Barack Obama and Eric H. Holder Jr. think the question isnt cut and dried isnt black and white that there are some shady gray areas that there really isnt just one little answer. Mr. Paul had asked that question to Mr. Holder who said this in response: It is possible I suppose to imagine an extraordinary circumstance in which it would be necessary and appropriate under the Constitution and applicable laws … for the president to authorize the military to use lethal force within the territory of the United States." He was even more evasive during a Senate hearing offering long meandering philosophical answers to the easy query and never mentioning the Constitution. Well that did not sit well with the eye doctor from Kentucky. I will speak until I can no longer speak" the senator said shortly before noon Wednesday. I will speak as long as it takes until the alarm is sounded from coast to coast that our Constitution is important that your rights to trial by jury are precious that no American should be killed by a drone on American soil without first being charged with a crime without first being found to be guilty by a court." He wouldnt yield the floor until nearly midnight. And he would be joined by some new young bucks of the Republican Party Sen. Ted Cruz who read from a letter written by William Barrett Travis a lieutenant colonel in the Texas Army who died at the Alamo (I shall never surrender or retreat") and Sen. Marco Rubio who quoted rapper Jay Z (Its funny when seven days can change it was all good just a week ago"). Meanwhile the old bulls like Sens. Lindsey Graham and John McCain were dining with the president at the pricey Jefferson Hotel. Mr. McCain who gave a thumbs-up sign as he left the soiree said Mr. Paul should calm down" and called the filibuster a political stunt." For his part the increasingly irrelevant Mr. Graham slammed the soliloquy as ridiculous." But by mid-day Thursday the White House sang a whole new tune. No doubt at the order of the president Mr. Holder wrote a letter to Mr. Paul in which he said: The answer to the question is no." Under duress and under public humiliation" Mr. Paul said with a smile the White House will respond and do the right thing." Yet there was more than just a simple answer to an elementary question. The stand taken by the spry young pups of the Senate while the fat old dogs dined with the president proves there are some new pack leaders in town. No longer will a president chew up the Constitution not as long as were here the alpha pups said. And we dont need to ask nicely over and over and over well just stand here all of us until the president answers. So if old dogs really can learn new tricks they better learn em and quick cuz these new dogs are growling and showing their teeth. And one thing is clear: Their bite is worse than their bark. • Joseph Curl covered the White House and politics for a decade for The Washington Times and is now editor of the Drudge Report. He can be reached at josephcurl@gmail.com and on Twitter at @josephcurl.
 
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