The senator from Kentucky took
the stage Sunday evening at the annual South by Southwest festival for a
discussion with Texas Tribune CEO Evan Smith. The two touched on the
potential of campaigning with Snapchat, the changing media landscape,
and Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email address while serving as
secretary of state.
Asked about the way technology might change the presidency come 2017,
Paul replied, “My advice to whoever wins is: Don’t use your private
emails.”Paul was referring to recent revelations that Clinton used a private email address during her time helming State and later deleted more than 31,830 emails after aides deemed anything lacking certain keywords or names to be irrelevant for the purposes of archiving. In a press conference last week, Clinton explained that she chose to use a private email address while in office because it was more “convenient” than carrying two devices in order to access two accounts on the go.
As new revelations about those messages continue to surface, Republicans have seized the opportunity
to criticize Clinton. South Carolina Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy, whose
House committee on Benghazi first surfaced the private address,
denounced her actions and questioned her motives. “It’s not up to
Secretary Clinton to decide what’s public record and what’s not,” he
said last week on the CBS program “Face the Nation.”
Paul echoed that sentiment and accused Clinton of breaking the law.
“The law can’t be different for
different people,” he told the audience. “I think there’s a certain
arrogance and hypocrisy that’s going to be difficult for her to
overcome. … I think you have to obey the law. I obey a lot of laws I
don’t agree with.”
Hillary Clinton answers questions from reporters March 10, 2015 at the United Nations in New York. (Don Emmert/AFP …
Asked if he himself used a private email while in office, Paul declined to answer the question.
“We’re not under the same rules,” he said. “We’re not required to do
anything under government email. The executive department is under
different standards.”
Paul also took the opportunity
to tout the new technologies he’s using to reach young constituents. On
March 11, in preparation for opening Paul’s new Austin office, his
senior field and technology strategist, Rachel Kania, called his operation
the “most technologically savvy campaign in the field, and his message
will inspire and widen the GOP base unlike any other candidate’s.”
Paul, who participated in the first-ever senatorial Snapchat interview in January, emphasized that politicians must reach young voters via the platform they’re on.“You look at Snapchat’s audience, it’s like an 18- to 24-year-old audience,” he said. “These are new voters. I’m worried about the next generation having jobs, having a robust economy, having privacy, having a bill of rights. I think a lot of kids are interested in that, but if you don’t go to a platform where they are, you won’t find them.”
The senator also acknowledged that this means communicating with new, different media entities.
“You’ve got to talk to the Texas Tribune and that girl in the bathtub,” he said, referring to YouTube star GloZell Green, who before her January interview with President Obama was best known for bathing in milk and cereal.
Throughout the talk, Paul expressed a common ground with the
technologically minded, emphasizing that innovation was synonymous with
his libertarian views.“Voters are now no longer Republican or Democrat and no longer neatly fit in one box or the other,” he said. “We think that people potentially interested in our message are free thinkers, people who think for themselves, people who invent and fly drones around a conference room on the fourth floor.”