"There’s a growing recognition that the GOP is intellectually bankrupt and morally bankrupt," explained Bovard. "Most of these Republican ‘rebranding’ efforts amount to a group of overpaid consultants getting detached from reality, but I’m glad that Paul is putting together these meetings. I hope the battle of ideas is changing." [...]
Since his congressional comeback in 1996 — after a long stint as a Libertarian Party politician, and after only narrowly defeating a Democrat-turned-Republican that Newt Gingrich’s Republican leadership supported — Paul has maintained a small circle of allies in Congress. Some of them, like Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), are regular guests at the expert luncheons. But the most prominent new face is Bachmann, the rising conservative star who left C-SPAN and YouTube watchers scratching their heads with a constitutional grilling that seemed to puzzle Geithner. "What provision in the Constitution could you point to to give authority for the actions that have been taken by the Treasury since March of ‘08?" asked Bachmann during a hearing on March 24. "What in the Constitution could you point to to give authority to the Treasury’s extraordinary actions that have been taken?"
Bachmann "goes to these luncheons on a weekly basis," said Debbee Keller, Bachmann’s press secretary. Keller noted that Bachmann was reading "Meltdown," which argues that the New Deal failed and that the Federal Reserve is responsible for the current economic crisis. "Just as Austrian theory suggests," wrote Woods, "the Fed’s mischief was responsible for the Great Depression."