Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky). Reuters/Kevin Lamarque Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) started his presidential campaign on Tuesday.

Unfortunately for him, in the rush to launch he had a little typo on his new website.

We all make typos on the internet. It happens!

Unfortunately for Paul, the typo was in just about the worst spot you could imagine ...

The site debuted on Wednesday, and the typo came on top of its "education" section. In a video on that page, Paul declared "education is the great equalizer." The title of that clip mistakenly referred to "eductation."

"Rand Paul Opposes A One-Size-Fits-All Approach to Eductation," it said.

The typo was fixed after it began to attract attention during Paul's announcement speech.

Obviously, as writers we often make typos ourselves, and we are sympathetic to Paul's plight. However, in the context of a presidential campaign where the site presumably spent a good deal of time in development, this could prove to be a memorable slipup.

Paul isn't the first presidential candidate to commit a spelling gaffe. In 2012, former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney promised "A Better Amercia," on an iPhone app for his campaign. That typo went viral and was widely mocked.

Check out Paul's misspelled education page below: