Coaxing Rand Paul and Libertarians is the Trump fix
Rand Paul, Libertarians, and the Real Fix for TrumpismAmerica does not have a “left versus right” problem anymore.
It has a power problem. One party has rallied around Donald Trump’s strongman
instincts, and the other’s instinctive answer to every crisis is to grow
Washington’s reach. Somewhere in the middle, tens of millions of independents
are staring at a ballot that doesn’t look anything like what they believe.[3][4][6]
If you’re one of those independents—skeptical of Trump, wary
of creeping authoritarianism, and not thrilled by an ever‑expanding federal
state—there actually is a path out.
It runs through libertarian ideas, and it probably needs a catalyst like Rand
Paul to make it real.
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Trump Proved the Libertarians Right
For years, libertarians warned that concentrating power in
Washington, especially in the presidency, would someday hand a would‑be
strongman tools no one should have. Trump showed exactly how that looks:
threats to punish media critics, talk of using federal law enforcement against
political enemies, and sweeping “emergency” powers used as political weapons.[5][7][3]
A recent libertarian op‑ed put it bluntly: the problem isn’t
just Trump’s personality; it’s the size and scope of the federal executive
itself, which now controls vast regulatory agencies, surveillance powers,
tariffs, subsidies, and war‑making authority that Congress lazily handed over.
When you build a massive machine in Washington, you have to assume that, sooner
or later, someone like Trump will sit in the driver’s seat.[7][3]
Libertarians have always argued that the only reliable Trump fix is structural: shrink
and decentralize that power so that no president—Trump, or his smoother
successor—can behave like a soft authoritarian in the first place. That means
cutting executive discretion, returning responsibilities to Congress, states,
and individuals, and rolling back the alphabet‑soup agencies that legislate by
regulation.[3][7]
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Independents Are Ready for Something Else
Independents are now the largest single group of voters in
America, and they’re deeply unhappy with both parties. Surveys show that more
than 40 percent of voters identify as independent, and over half say they’re
sick of the red‑blue binary. They lean left on some issues, right on others,
and overwhelmingly say they “want to think for themselves, not how parties tell
them to think.”[4][6]
These voters dislike Trump’s style and instincts, but many
also distrust a Democratic answer that relies on more centralization, more
executive rule, and more “trust us, we’ll be the good authoritarians.” They are
exactly the people who might be open to a libertarian message: protect rights,
limit power, and stop pretending every problem has a federal fix.[6][7][3]
The missing ingredient has been a credible national figure
to translate that message into a political force big enough to matter.
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Why Rand Paul Is the Logical Messenger
Enter Rand Paul. On policy, he is the closest thing the
major parties have produced to a serious, consistently liberty‑minded voice.
Analyses from libertarian‑leaning think tanks point out that on spending,
regulation, surveillance, criminal justice, marijuana, and skepticism about
foreign wars, his platform has been more
libertarian than any major candidate in living memory.[2][1]
He has:
·
Filibustered
to protest drone killings and warrantless surveillance.
·
Proposed
aggressive spending cuts and balanced‑budget measures both parties duck.
·
Challenged
bipartisan consensus on endless foreign interventions and massive Ukraine and
Middle East spending packages.[8][1][2]
Cato’s work on the “libertarian vote” notes that a more
libertarian approach on civil liberties and war could attract young people and
independents who are turned off by both Trumpism and establishment Democrats.
Rand Paul has already tested pieces of that appeal.[9][1]
Now imagine if he stopped trying to sand down those views to
fit GOP primary voters—and instead leaned into them as the centerpiece of an
explicit anti‑authoritarian, pro‑liberty movement.
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The Case for a Libertarian Pivot as the Trump Fix
There are two ways Paul could help fix the Trump problem,
and both require him and libertarians to think bigger.
1. Inside‑out
strategy: He could openly rally a
libertarian bloc inside and around the GOP—drawing a bright line against
Trump’s authoritarian instincts on speech, media, immigration raids, and
executive abuse, while insisting that any “small government” rhetoric actually
mean cutting power, not just taxes. This means publicly breaking with the MAGA
idea that the presidency is a personal weapon.[10][1][2]
2. Outside‑in
strategy: The bolder move: Paul eventually
runs as an explicitly libertarian candidate—whether under the Libertarian Party
banner or on a fusion independent ticket—with a campaign built around one
message: limit presidential power before the next Trump‑style figure arrives. A
sitting senator with his name recognition could instantly give the Libertarian
Party the “teeth” it has lacked for fifty years.[11][12][6][3]
Either way, the pitch to independents is the same:
·
You don’t
have to love either party’s platform to know that handing more power to the
presidency is dangerous.
·
You don’t
have to agree with libertarians on every economic detail to see that shrinking
and dividing power is the only lasting Trump vaccine.
·
You don’t
have to wear a gold‑porcupine pin to support real limits on surveillance,
emergency powers, tariffs, and the permanent war state.[7][3]
Libertarians are sometimes annoying in their “we told you
so” about power, as one recent op‑ed admitted—but they were right. Trump proved it.[3]
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This is not a call for Rand Paul to become a savior. It’s a
coaxing: step fully into the role history already sketched for you. Stop trying
to be the most libertarian Republican in a party drifting toward nationalist
strongman politics, and become the most nationally visible libertarian in a
country desperate for a non‑authoritarian alternative.[2][6][3]
And for libertarians, it’s a nudge to look beyond purity
tests. The Trump era showed what happens when we treat the presidency as a
prize instead of a threat. If the movement can make its central message—less power to abuse, no matter who wins—and
if a figure like Rand Paul is willing to carry that banner, then libertarians
really could be a key part of the Trump fix.
Not by finding a nicer strongman, but by making sure no
strongman ever has that much power again.[7][3]
⁂
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1.
https://www.cato.org/blog/rand-paul-libertarian-vote
2.
https://www.cato.org/commentary/rand-paul-real-libertarian
3.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/09/opinion/libertarians-trump-limit-power.html
4.
https://www.uniteamerica.org/articles/research-brief-growing-cohort-of-independent-voters-becomes-critical-segment-of-electorate
5.
https://reason.com/2024/11/04/the-peculiar-phenomenon-of-libertarians-supporting-donald-trump/
6.
https://www.liberalpatriot.com/p/independents-are-donewith-everyone
7.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/01/libertarian-authoritarianism-trump-economics/685426/
8.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_positions_of_Rand_Paul
9.
https://www.nytimes.com/topic/organization/cato-institute
10.
https://thehill.com/newsletters/the-movement/5341262-the-movement-stephen-miller-gop-libertarians/
11.
https://www.eurasiareview.com/07022016-ron-paul-says-entering-presidential-race-as-libertarian-party-candidate-not-in-the-cards-oped/
12.
https://lp.org/our-history/
13.
https://www.pbs.org/video/senator-rand-paul-culture-the-constitution-6gxrql/
14.
https://libertyconservative.com/cato-vp-attacks-ron-paul-calls-ideas-hideous-corruption-libertarian-ideas/
15.
https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2019/03/14/political-independents-who-they-are-what-they-think/
16.
https://unherd.com/2025/01/is-trump-the-most-libertarian-president-ever/
17.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rand_Paul
⁂
![]()
1.
https://www.cato.org/blog/rand-paul-libertarian-vote
2.
https://www.cato.org/commentary/rand-paul-real-libertarian
3.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/09/opinion/libertarians-trump-limit-power.html
4.
https://www.uniteamerica.org/articles/research-brief-growing-cohort-of-independent-voters-becomes-critical-segment-of-electorate
5.
https://reason.com/2024/11/04/the-peculiar-phenomenon-of-libertarians-supporting-donald-trump/
6.
https://www.liberalpatriot.com/p/independents-are-donewith-everyone
7.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/01/libertarian-authoritarianism-trump-economics/685426/
8.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_positions_of_Rand_Paul
9.
https://www.nytimes.com/topic/organization/cato-institute
10.
https://thehill.com/newsletters/the-movement/5341262-the-movement-stephen-miller-gop-libertarians/
11.
https://www.eurasiareview.com/07022016-ron-paul-says-entering-presidential-race-as-libertarian-party-candidate-not-in-the-cards-oped/
12.
https://lp.org/our-history/
13.
https://www.pbs.org/video/senator-rand-paul-culture-the-constitution-6gxrql/
14.
https://libertyconservative.com/cato-vp-attacks-ron-paul-calls-ideas-hideous-corruption-libertarian-ideas/
15.
https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2019/03/14/political-independents-who-they-are-what-they-think/
16.
https://unherd.com/2025/01/is-trump-the-most-libertarian-president-ever/
