Paul
discussed the matter with staff Wednesday morning and sent out a
statement confirming the decision to drop out of the Republican
presidential primary.
"It's been an
incredible honor to run a principled campaign for the White House," Paul
said in the statement. "Today, I will end where I began, ready and
willing to fight for the cause of Liberty.
Paul,
a Kentucky Republican, is expected to instead place his focus squarely
on his Senate reelection bid, where he faces a wealthy Democrat,
Lexington Mayor Jim Gray, who has the money to partially finance his
campaign.
Paul finished a
disappointing fifth place in Monday's Iowa caucuses, registering just
4.5% of the vote despite placing a heavy emphasis on the state's college
towns to bring out younger voters inspired by his libertarian-minded
message. He promised that night to continue his campaign.
But
the Paul sources said a morning-after review made clear to Paul that
there was not a viable path to winning the Republican nomination and
that fund-raising was becoming extremely difficult.
Indeed,
as he heads into the New Hampshire primary, where his father Ron Paul
won 23% of the vote in 2012, polls have found the younger Paul
struggling to gain traction.
Paul's
calls for a less aggressive foreign policy, which his critics have
dubbed as "isolationist," failed to connect with GOP voters at a time of
growing national security fears. Moreover, Paul had a hard time
reestablishing his father's libertarian coalition because he had sought
to broaden his appeal to more establishment-minded Republicans, hurting
his credibility with some in his core base of supporters.
Dropping
out this early is a disappointment for Paul. He had engineered a major
change in Kentucky's primary system to allow him to run for two offices
at the same time, a move aimed at circumventing a prohibition in state
law prohibiting candidates from doing so. The state party agreed to
change its traditional paper ballot primary to a caucus system in early
March, in order to let him avoid the restriction that he couldn't appear
on the ballot twice.
Still, as he now focuses on his Senate race, he remains the heavy favorite in a state that has grown increasingly red.
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