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Thursday, March 20, 2014

Standing O For Rand Paul at Berkeley

Cheered by a youthful audience in one of the country's most liberal enclaves, Sen. Rand Paul - one of the Republican Party's leading contenders for the White House in 2016 - delivered a scathing rebuke to the U.S. intelligence community Wednesday, calling it "drunk with power."

"I don't know about you, but I'm worried," the Kentucky senator told 400 people who filled a hall at UC Berkeley's International House. "If the CIA is spying on Congress, who exactly can or will stop them?"

Paul's comments come one week after Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., took to the Senate floor to accuse the CIA of illegal computer searches intended to hinder her Intelligence Committee's probe of alleged U.S. torture of terrorism suspects.

Paul said Feinstein's allegations had shaken Washington. "I look into the eyes of senators and I think I see real fear," he said. "I think I perceive fear of an intelligence community drunk with power, unrepentant and uninclined to relinquish power."

'Great speech'

He said he had told Feinstein, " 'Great speech, everybody is talking about it.' I hope she will stand up, not let the CIA push her around, not let the NSA (National Security Agency) push her around."

Feinstein's charges were denied by CIA Director John Brennan, whose nomination Paul filibustered for nearly 13 hours last March after the Obama administration refused to rule out drone strikes against terrorism suspects within the United States in "extraordinary circumstances."

In response to Feinstein's allegations, Paul said, the Senate should appoint a select committee - "bipartisan, independent" and with full investigative powers - to probe spying abuses.

Unlikely venue

Paul noted that he was taking his campaign to places that don't traditionally vote Republican. "Like Berkeley," he said to cheers.

"Part of it might be the Republican Party (must) ... evolve, adapt or die," he said.

"Remember when Domino's finally admitted they had bad crust?" he said to laughs. "We need a different type of party."

Paul has jumped into the lead among prospective Republican presidential candidates for 2016, according to a CNN/CRC International poll released this week.

Sixteen percent of the 367 Republicans and GOP-leaning independents surveyed said they favored Paul, compared with 15 percent for Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the 2012 Republican vice presidential nominee. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who is also in the Bay Area this week, came in at 11 percent.

Paul's Berkeley appearance dramatized his ability to fire up under-30 voters, the same group that helped put Barack Obama in the White House. Paul, however, delivers a far different libertarian message that government - particularly the agencies that scoop up millions of Americans' phone-call and e-mail metadata - needs to be restrained.

"He's helping to subvert what people think of when they think of Republicans," said John Dennis, who is mounting a GOP challenge to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi in her San Francisco district. "He's challenging the administration on the NSA more than anyone else. And his filibuster was so successful, the people on the left were cheering him on."

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