Monday, May 20, 2013
By Kevin Miller kmiller@mainetoday.com
Washington Bureau Chief
TAMPA, Fla. – After weeks of wrangling with national party leaders, members of Maine's delegation to the Republican National Convention joined thousands of other Ron Paul devotees Sunday to celebrate the libertarian congressman and attack a GOP establishment they view as hostile to change.

Ashley Ryan of Maine speaks to Ron Paul supporters at the "We Are the Future" rally at the University of South Florida Sun Dome in Tampa, Fla., on Sunday. She urged the crowd to "keep fighting" and stay engaged in politics despite frustrations.
Kevin Miller/Washington Bureau Chief
Ashley Ryan
MAINE DELEGATES, AS CHOSEN BY THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE
PAUL DELEGATES KEPT ON THE LIST:
• Mike Wallace
• Bryan Daugherty
• Bernie Johnson
• Ashley Ryan
• Alex Titcomb
• Brent Tweed
• Kevin Pierce
• Linda Bean
• Rep. Aaron Libby (R-North Waterboro)
• Stavros Mendros
NEW DELEGATES ADDED BY THE RNC:
• Peter Cianchette (Romney campaign chairman in Maine)
• Bill Schneider (Maine attorney general)
• Charlie Summers (Maine secretary of state and U.S. Senate candidate)
• Sen. Garrett Mason (R-Lisbon Falls)
• Rep. Dale Crafts (R-Lisbon)
• Josh Tardy (former Maine House minority leader)
• David Emery (former congressman from Maine)
• Bobby Reynolds
• John Atkinson
• Hayes Gahagan
Note: Some of the Romney delegates are expected to be replaced by alternates.
More than two dozen people spoke or performed during the "We Are the Future" rally organized by the Paul campaign on the eve of a convention to nominate Mitt Romney. But some of the loudest cheers -- as well as several standing ovations -- went to a 21-year-old University of Southern Maine student.
A Paul supporter and one of Maine's 20 contested delegates to the convention, Ashley Ryan urged the fired-up crowd gathered inside the cavernous University of South Florida Sun Dome to "keep fighting" and stay engaged in politics despite frustrations.
"I say that no matter what happens, we all make a commitment right now to get involved and stay involved at the local level," said Ryan, who later this week will become the country's youngest state Republican national committeewoman. "What we did in my home state of Maine is nothing short of incredible."
What Maine's Paul supporters did was win control of the state GOP convention in May by a slim margin and then elect 20 declared Paul backers to the 24-person slate of Maine representatives at the Republican National Convention.
The Paul camp's takeover of the state convention was controversial, however. And late last week, the Republican National Committee voted to replace 10 of the 20 Paul delegates with new delegates likely to support Romney after determining the convention was marred by illegal votes and parliamentary violations. Maine was one of several states where Paul delegates were challenged with the RNC.
During his closing remarks at Sunday's rally, Paul alluded to the challenges faced by the delegates in various states. But in a speech that was more sharply critical of his own party than of President Obama, Paul lashed out at party leaders for rule changes that he and others regard as a power grab by the national party at the expense of local and state committees.
"They have been bending the rules and breaking the rules and re-writing the rules for a long time, and that is what we need to stop from happening," Paul said to boisterous cheers from the crowd.
Ryan was even more critical of the rule changes that affect how delegates are chosen by states and urged convention-goers to resist them on the floor.
"Regardless of who someone supports for the nomination, these rules destroy the integrity of the Republican Party," Ryan said. "Our party will go from being a 'big tent' with many ideas to a small group at the mercy of a few political insiders. This is not what the Republican Party was founded on."
Paul's views have made him popular with libertarians and tea party members, and he hit on many of those controversial proposals of the "Ron Paul Revolution" during his nearly hour-long speech. He called for auditing and eventually abolishing the Federal Reserve, halting all military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, dramatically scaling back or eliminating federal regulation of the financial sector and legalizing drugs.
Republican leaders -- including Romney -- have since embraced Paul's call for auditing the Federal Reserve, incorporating it and other positions pushed by the Texas congressman into the GOP platform. But RNC officials -- apparently wary of disruptions by Paul supporters during the made-for-TV Romney nomination process -- have made sure to keep Paul's role in the convention to a minimum.
(Continued on page 2)
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Mary White of Rathdrum, Idaho, shows her support for Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, at a rally at the University of South Florida Sun Dome on the sidelines of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Sunday. The Associated Press |
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