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Rand Paul Woos Youth Vote for 2016 Presidential Bid
Rand Paul’s Tactic for Winning Over a Nervous GOP: Invoke Reagan · The Fiscal Times

It was nearly a year ago but it still very much resonates now. Rand Paul’s speech at Howard University, the historically black college in Washington, D.C., didn’t go precisely as he’d hoped.

In a bid to reach out to young African-Americans last April, the Republican Senator from Kentucky offended some in his audience by asking whether they knew the NAACP was founded by Republicans – yes, they knew – and botching the first name of Edward W. Brooke, the first black U.S. senator elected since Reconstruction.

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A champion of conservative Libertarians and the Tea Party, Paul later said he’d learned from the experience and would continue to reach out to African Americans. “I thought my reception at Howard was much better than my reception from the left-wing media,” he quipped.

Not long after, Paul was back before a young black audience at Simmons College in Louisville, Ky. The freshman senator was blunt: "I’m trying to figure out how to get more votes. Because in the end the Republican Party, I think, will no longer be a national party if we don’t somehow attract African-American votes, Latino votes, Asian American votes. We haven’t been doing very well.”

Since then, Paul – an early favorite for president in Republican and conservative straw polls – has been regularly reaching out to political factions and interest groups outside the Republican tent. His overarching message: The Republicans will lose the presidential election again in 2016 unless they expand a political base dominated by non-Hispanic white males.

His speeches also combine his opposition to the National Security Agency’s surveillance programs and what he sees as unwarranted U.S. military and diplomatic intervention overseas, with his concerns about drug sentencing, excessive government regulations and an erosion of civil liberties.

Related: Rand Paul’s Long-Shot Effort to Attract Millennials

Back in November, Paul told cadets at the Citadel in Charleston, S.C., that he and other political leaders “owe it to you to clearly show our national interest before we go to war” and that “above all, we should demand a formal declaration of war before we risk the blood of our soldiers.”

At the Detroit Economic Club on Dec. 16, Paul proposed revitalizing the nation’s cities by creating “economic freedom zones.” His plan would cut federal taxes in communities like Detroit that have an unemployment rate of 12 percent or more. “Inside these zones, we’ll suspend the capital gains tax and allow small businesses to deduct most of what they invest,” he said.